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Ziel des Verbundprojektes APFel (Projektlaufzeit: 01.01.2010 ‐ 31.03.2014)war eine zeitlich vorwärts‐ und rückwärtsgerichtete Lokalisation von Personen innerhalb eines Kameranetzwerkes aus sich nicht überlappenden Kameras in Hyperechtzeit zu ermöglichen. Einsatzbereiche dieses Szenarios sind kritische Infrastrukturen wie Flughäfen und Flugplätze. Zunächst fokussierte das Projekt APFel auf die Lokalisation einer einzelnen Zielperson. Weiterführend wurden die entwickelten Verfahren auf die Analyse von Gruppen erweitert, um Personen als Teil einer Gruppe lokalisieren zu können.
In the context of existing approaches to cluster computing we present a newly developed modular framework `SimpleHydra' for rapid deployment and management of Beowulf clusters. Instead of focusing only the pure computation tasks on homogeneous clusters (i.e. clusters with identically set up nodes), this framework aims to ease the configuration of heterogeneous clusters and to provide a low-level / high-level object-oriented API for low-latency distributed computing. Our framework does not make any restrictions regarding the hardware and minimizes the use of external libraries to the case of special modules. In addition to that our framework enables the user to develop highly dynamic cluster topologies. We describe the framework's general structure as well as time critical elements, give application examples in the `Big-Data' context during a research project and briefly discuss additional features. Furthermore we give a thorough theoretical time/space complexity analysis of our implemented methods and general approaches.
In this paper, we describe an efficient method for a fast people re-identification based on models of human clothes. An initial model is estimated during people detection and tracking, which will be refined during the re-identification. This stepwise extraction, combination and comparing of features speeds up the whole re-identification. For the refining, several saliency maps are used to extract individual features. These individual features are located separately for any human body part. The body parts are located with an optimized GPU-based HOG detector. Furthermore, we introduce a meanshift-based fusion concept which utilizes multiple detectors in order to increase the detection reliability.