From Safe Campus to Smart Campus
Transforming campuses into safer and smarter institutions with artificial intelligence and data-driven solutions
- By Stephanie Weagle
- April 01, 2019
Today, educational institutions
operate much like a city, with
centralized law enforcement
ensuring the safety of students
and visitors, responding and
investigating when crime occurs and striving
for improved quality of life for residents.
Campuses house local businesses—sometimes
even healthcare clinics and stadiums,
as well—which can serve thousands of people
daily.
Much like cities, campuses are embracing
sophisticated artificial intelligence and datadriven
solutions to understand, mitigate and
solve security and operational challenges.
Based on Machine Learning techniques, AIbacked
technologies are trained to extract,
identify, classify, recognize and index metadata
from video surveillance content, which
can then be leveraged as intelligence for
driving anything from investigating crime to
recognizing a security threat or emergency,
and even deriving operational insights for
improved business performance.
Video content analytics solutions, for
instance, enable university and K-12 campuses
to utilize their video surveillance
infrastructure to extract data intelligence.
Maximizing their existing investment in
security surveillance, campuses leveraging
video analytics are enabling increased public
safety and accelerated security response,
while also driving operational productivity
and business performance for on-campus
retailers, healthcare institutions, stadiums,
mass event venues and more.
Video Content Analytics 101
Campuses are home to thousands of security
cameras—these are installed on pedestrian
pathways, main roads, around the perimeter
of campus buildings and inside them and
throughout parking lots. These sensors are
used to surveil diverse spaces, from dormitories
to classrooms, stores, stadiums, theaters,
and both indoor and outdoor venues.
Security surveillance is designed to help
campuses increase situational awareness,
but—even with state-of-the-art cameras
spread throughout the grounds—the challenges
of reviewing and actively monitoring
video are overwhelming. In the aftermath of
an event, reviewing video across multiple
cameras and recordings is both work intensive
and inefficient for security. While the
evidence extracted is valuable, dedicating the
time and manpower to comprehensively
comb through video is not always justifiable.
Real-time manual monitoring of video feeds
often is equally ineffective: Even the most
attentive operators can be easily distracted or
misinterpret a critical event.
To streamline the review of video and
response to threats, video content analytics
leverages machine learning to analyze video,
extract objects that appear, identify and classify
them and then index them as metadata.
This metadata can be searched to pinpoint
specific people or objects of interest or leveraged
to configure alerts based on predefined
rules. Investigators looking for a suspect
wearing red can isolate all appearances of
people wearing red in video, across all cameras
and also trigger calls to action any time a
person wearing red is detected in real-time in
certain areas. Beyond this, by analyzing the
aggregated data from long-term video recordings
across cameras, law enforcement officers
can uncover trends and define a benchmark
for typical behaviors, so that unusual and suspicious
activity is easier to identify.
Attaining Campus-wide
Situational Awareness
The ability to configure real-time alerts can
increase security’s awareness of on-campus
activity and accelerate their response to
threats. As soon as an alert is triggered, law
enforcement can immediately assess the
activity and determine whether something
malicious is afoot. By bringing the most relevant
details to the forefront, video content
analytics alerts keep security focused and
responsive.
While sometimes innocuous, oftentimes
loitering can indicate a potential threat. For
instance, school security might want to be
notified of people or cars dwelling in a campus
parking lot after hours, suggesting
potential criminal activity. Video analytics
can also help streamline daily school activities
that require monitoring, such as student
pick up and drop off—enabling security to
take note of any excessive dwelling or unrecognized
vehicles in the parking lot. During
the school day, security can be alerted to outdoor movement during class time and quickly
understand whether students are cutting
class or whether interlopers are entering the
campus. As active shooter situations continue
to terrorize universities and day schools,
the ability to immediately detect anomalous
activity, attain situational awareness and
respond to threats is critical.
Dwelling detection is also crucial for preventing
on-campus theft. Campus safety
experts note that loitering around dorm
entryways, bike racks and facilities that store
valuable equipment can indicate intent to
commit a crime. With dwelling alerts for
these areas, police can be quickly mobilized
to deter or proactively respond to thievery.
Beyond dwelling, video analytics can be
used to alert to overcrowding and traffic bottlenecks
to mitigate the risk of violence erupting
or the outbreak of a fight. On college campuses,
where political gatherings can spark
violence, police can closely track activity and
react to indications of escalating risk.
Security surveillance is used across campuses,
but with the addition of artificial intelligence
and data-driven video analytics and
real-time alerting capabilities, security can
enhance situational awareness, detect unusual
and excessive dwelling and accelerate
responses to emergencies, threats and suspicious
behavior.
Accelerating On-Campus
Investigations and Security
Response
On-campus crime is not always proactively
preventable. In the aftermath of an incident,
the primary concern is accelerating the post
event investigation. Law enforcement must
be able to quickly understand what occurred,
identify suspects and then locate them to
mitigate future threats and crimes.
Video content analytics enables campus
law enforcement to accelerate investigations,
enabling them to quickly and easily understand
the event and extract evidence. When
investigators have a suspect, they can search
video based on known features of the individual,
such as gender, clothing color,
height—even the direction in which the suspect
escaped.
In cases where suspect details are unavailable,
investigators can leverage extracted
metadata to understand quickly what
occurred based on objects and people
recorded in the video. Package theft, which is
a common occurrence in dorm settings, can
be easily investigated by isolating which people
accepted package deliveries and by tracking
suspects and packages’ movements
throughout the dorm. Even when crime
occurs over the weekend or at night, the
operator can rapidly review hours of footage,
filtering based on known criteria, to discover
when the crime occurred, collect evidence
and pinpoint suspects. This is equally effective
when campuses must investigate accidents,
vandalism or damages to school property,
personal belongings or on-site vehicles.
Driving Operational Efficiency
Across Campus
Over time, when video metadata is extracted,
aggregated and visualized, it becomes a powerful,
actionable asset for universities and
K-12 campuses. Uncovering insight about
how amenities are used and abused, operations
managers can make data-driven decisions,
develop contingency plans and streamline
response to unexpected conditions.
Understanding movement in, out of and
across campus, within and around buildings
and along pedestrian and vehicular pathways,
educational institutions can optimize campus-
wide traffic and facility maintenance. The
ability to evaluate which entrances and exits
are most often used—and if any are underutilized—
can help the campus proactively track
maintenance and repair requirements and
meet them before problems arise. Understanding
how cars navigate within the campus,
managers can insert infrastructure such
as crosswalks or stop signs to increase pedestrian
safety and prevent bottlenecks or accidents.
Even within a building, the campus
can address or prevent overcrowding by
understanding usual trends and accommodating
visitor preferences for navigating each
building. A broader view of campus activities
and entry and exit patterns also can drive
traffic optimization, from coordinating public
transportation, inter-campus transit and
parking lots, based on need.
Beyond traffic concerns, understanding
visitor movement and building occupancy
patterns can drive more efficient energy consumption
across campus. With video analytics,
operations managers of sprawling campuses
can quickly visualize where and when
activity occurs and build sustainability strategies
based on actionable data.
In addition to the visitors and students,
campuses also oversee extensive staffs. Video
analytics can help managers track employee
activity, identify inefficiencies and develop
solutions to drive productivity. Having granular
intelligence about the goings-on about
campus is key, and educational institutions
should be taking advantage of all their resources
to extract and leverage data for streamlining
everyday functions and operations.
Providing Deeper Intelligence
and Broader Value
Campuses are multifaceted and complex
businesses, involving property management
and rental concerns; event execution and
organization issues; retail operations and
performance indicators; among multiple
other management functions. Leveraging
security surveillance infrastructure, video
analytics provides visibility and value across
the broad organization, enabling the various
stakeholders to derive granular insights for
extensive business strategies. When it comes
to renting space for on-campus retailers, restaurants
and stadium vendors, the campus
can extract data to demonstrate the strategic
value of each property, to set fair and justifiable
pricing. Beyond this, they can also support
on-campus businesses with data intelligence
generated from video surveillance.
Stadiums and college sports teams can leverage
actionable insights to optimize security,
staff engagement, traffic and parking flows
and concession placement and purchases.
Retailers can prevent losses, abandoned purchases
and disgruntled customers by
embracing intelligence-based approaches to
staff management, store configuration, security
and checkout options.
The possibilities are endless and the common
ground is video analytics. As campuses
ready themselves for future security threats,
they should consider technologies, such as
video content analytics, which maximize
existing infrastructure, provide broad value
across the business and drive sophisticated
and proactive security.
This article originally appeared in the March/April 2019 issue of Campus Security Today.