Video cameras on the lookout for terrorists

Monday, August 7, 2006; Posted: 2:52 p.m. EDT (18:52
GMT)


Researchers at General Electric Co.'s sprawling
research center, are creating new "smart video
surveillance" systems that can detect explosives by
recognizing the electromagnetic waves given off by
objects, even under clothing.

Scientist Peter Tu and his team are also developing
programs that can recognize faces, pinpoint distress
in a crowd by honing in on erratic body movements and
synthesize the views of several cameras into one
bird's eye view, as part of a growing effort to thwart
terrorism.

"We're definitely on the cutting edge," said Tu, 39.
"If you want to reduce risk, video is the way to do
it. The threat is always evolving, so our video is
always evolving."

Scientists at the GE complex, a landscaped, gated
campus of laboratories and offices spread out over 525
acres and home to 1,900 scientists and staff, and
others in the industry hope to use various
technologies to reduce false alarms, cut manpower used
on mundane tasks and give first-responders better
tools to assess threats. The country's growing
security needs also provide an opportunity to boost
business.

The United States and its allies now face a new "Iraq
generation" of terrorists who have learned how to make
explosive devices, assassinate leaders and carry out
other mayhem since the U.S. invasion of the country
more than three years ago, said Roger Cressey, a
former counterterrorism official in the Bush
Administration who now runs his own consulting
business in Arlington, Virginia.

"These people are far more adept and capable in many
respects than al-Qaeda before 9-11," he said. "They
don't appear in any no-fly list or terrorism data
base."

Since 2002, GE has spent $4 billion buying smaller
businesses to take a bigger share of the $160 billion
global security industry, a market that includes
everything from building security to narcotics
detection. The company expects $2 billion in revenue
from its security businesses this year. That should
rise to $2.8 billion in 2009, said Louis Parker, chief
executive of GE's security unit.

Philadelphia-based Acoustech Corp. and
Providence-Based FarSounder Inc. received Homeland
Security grants to develop systems that can detect
underwater threats such as divers with explosives.

"Ever since the Department of Homeland Security was
put into place, our business has gone up," said James
McConnell of Acoustech. The three-person company takes
in $500,000 in revenue a year.

Systems currently run about $1 million from other
vendors so the companies are trying to make systems
that would be more affordable for port authorities and
other waterfront facilities around the country such as
power plants and oil refineries.

"We've had a lot of customers calling and asking for a
solution to the problem," said FarSounder founder
Matthew Zimmerman.

Such cost-saving measures could benefit New York City,
which in June, had its share of federal anti-terrorism
grants from the Department of Homeland Security cut by
40 percent to $124.5 million.

Cressey said the country has to find the best ways to
protect itself and that includes investing in new
technologies for things like ports, airports and mass
transit systems.

The U.S. government is spending $1.1 billion this year
to fund anti-terrorism technology research and has
spent about $3 billion over the past three years, said
Christopher Kelly, a DHS spokesman.

At General Electric, researchers are working on
software that allows cameras to separately track
people and the items they are carrying to help detect
when suspicious packages are left in airports,
stadiums and other public places.

One such system is already being tested using video
from London's Victoria train station, part of the
transit system hit by suicide bombers in July 2005 in
which 52 people were killed and another 740 wounded.

Cressey said there are about 30 million video
surveillance cameras in the United States shooting
about four billion hours of footage every week.
Relying more on computers to go through that footage
would allow manpower to be better used elsewhere and
perhaps lead to faster recognition of possible
threats.

Among numerous other projects, GE is working on
baggage scanners that use advanced X-ray and CT
technologies to detect traces of explosives faster and
with greater accuracy and shoe scanners that use
quadrupole resonance, similar to magnetic resonance
imaging, to improve screening of passengers' shoes
while they are still on their feet.

Still, many officials warn that technology cannot
replace humans entirely.

"You can't get too reliant on these things," said
state Sen. Michael Balboni, a Long Island Republican
and chairman of the Senate's committee that oversees
homeland security issues. "If someone finds a way to
bypass them, they can use the technology against us.
You have to expect that enemies will find ways to get
around it."

Reply via email to