After security monitoring enters the high-definition era, one advantage is that the effect of the camera can be quantified by pixel density, and the security camera suitable for the requirements can be selected.
In the analog standard definition era, it is difficult for us to use specific digital standards to measure the quality of cameras in terms of 500TVL and 700TVL. Especially when we want to describe what kind of camera can see the face and distinguish the target contour, it is obviously difficult to use TVL TV line. The fundamental reason is that in the simulation era, the resolution of the camera is basically certain, and the gap is small. Especially after the camera is connected to the back-end DVR for coding, the resolution is generally CIF (352) × 288), 4cif or D1 (704 × 576), now it seems that there is little difference in the actual effect of these resolutions. We can only distinguish different camera recognition purposes from the lens focal length, which is fuzzy and unclear.
And if 80 × 80 pixels can meet the requirements of face recognition, which is very clear and intuitive. Obviously 80 × 80 pixels is a quantifiable, specific value.
Pixel density, in short, is the proportion of pixel size that can be recognized by human eye or machine vision (generally based on horizontal resolution pixels). The higher the camera resolution, the smaller the proportion of target picture pixels.
Pixel density standard
In general, we can divide the pixel density standards into identification, recognition, observation, detection, and monitoring based on the different monitoring purposes and people as the target.
In the analog standard definition era, it is difficult for us to use specific digital standards to measure the quality of cameras in terms of 500TVL and 700TVL. Especially when we want to describe what kind of camera can see the face and distinguish the target contour, it is obviously difficult to use TVL TV line. The fundamental reason is that in the simulation era, the resolution of the camera is basically certain, and the gap is small. Especially after the camera is connected to the back-end DVR for coding, the resolution is generally CIF (352) × 288), 4cif or D1 (704 × 576), now it seems that there is little difference in the actual effect of these resolutions. We can only distinguish different camera recognition purposes from the lens focal length, which is fuzzy and unclear.
And if 80 × 80 pixels can meet the requirements of face recognition, which is very clear and intuitive. Obviously 80 × 80 pixels is a quantifiable, specific value.
Pixel density, in short, is the proportion of pixel size that can be recognized by human eye or machine vision (generally based on horizontal resolution pixels). The higher the camera resolution, the smaller the proportion of target picture pixels.
Pixel density standard
In general, we can divide the pixel density standards into identification, recognition, observation, detection, and monitoring based on the different monitoring purposes and people as the target.
- Identification , the details are sufficient to determine the identity of the target individual without any doubt.
- Recognition, to determine whether the displayed target is the same person as someone you saw before.
- Observation, you can see some of the characteristics of the individual details, such as unique clothing, whether to wear a hat, wear glasses, etc.
- Detection, can detect whether the target in the screen is a person.
- Monitoring, can monitor or control crowd targets in the monitoring screen.