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Flame Pattern
Off-site
Smoke Plume

 
 

Technology

SigniFire™ was inspired by a very simple observation,  that a visual input provides sufficiently faster and more reliable information, then all of our other senses combined. It has been said "it's better to see once rather than hear a hundred times". It has been our goal to develop artificial intelligence that will be able to detect fires at the incipient stages of growth, using ordinary television cameras. The guards, even if they are thousands miles away, are provided with an extra degree of confidence by live video images that are sent from the location of the event.

Faster

Fire detection, for years, has relied on smoke particles physically reaching the smoke detectors. Vision works over larger distances at the "speed of light". This fundamental difference alone may give vision-based systems tens of minutes of lead time. Furthermore, due to a large number of false alarms, it became a standard practice in many places to verify the event before dispatching the alarm to a responder.  With a vision system, an operator can verify the alarm instantly as video images from the location pop-up on the screen.

Redundancy

SigniFire™ provides a high level of redundancy by looking for many different and unrelated aspects of fire, offering two distinct flame detection methods and three smoke detection methods that include:

bullet Flame Detection
  • Flame (pattern recognition)
  • Off-site (flames are hidden behind the obstacles)
bullet Smoke Detection
  • Smoke plume (slow/fast)
  • Smoke (diffusion effect)

In a typical situation the multiple detection methods will all alarm during different stages of an event. For example, during a flaming fire in the line of sight of the camera the flame detection may trigger first, followed by the off-site detection a few seconds later, then followed by the smoke detection. During a smoldering fire the smoke detection may alarm first followed by the flame detection and offsite detection if the smoldering fire were to transition to a flaming fire. 

Availability of vision input

The other advantage of a vision based technology is the availability of the video data that becomes critical at the time of alarm.  Response personnel, using a real time video feed are able to instantly assess  the severity of a situation and come up with most appropriate response. This information is most useful when presented with other information (direction to the scene, building contents, building floor plans, etc.) in a user-friendly format. Being able to see inside the burning building before arriving at the fire scene may be invaluable for a fire-fighting response team. The images will provide a incident commander with the information he/she needs to develop an appropriate response. Could a firefighter with a extinguisher be sent in or should a defensive posture be taken. Being able to see behind the wall may save the life of a firefighter entering a potentially dangerous situation.

Born for DSP

All SigniFire™ detection algorithms are based on Digital Signal Processing (DSP) of video images. It uses cascade of filters to convert visible images in such a way that specific events of interest produce a signature patterns. The DSP approach is ideal for implementation on the embedded architectures that reside inside a video camera.