News
        
        AI, IoT Put Surveillance Cameras to Work in Customer Service
        
        
        
			- By Richard Seeley
 - 07/26/2018
 
		
        
CCTV is not just for catching bad guys anymore.
The job description for those ubiquitous CCTV cameras is expanding from surveillance to customer service and marketing thanks to artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML) and Internet of Things (IoT) devices.
The Arcules Intelligent Video Cloud platform, unveiled at  Google Cloud Next 18 this week at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, provides  brick-and-mortar retailers and other consumer-oriented establishments with a  new AI-based sales tool.
The platform aggregates and analyzes video surveillance and  IoT sensor data to identify customer interactions with products to help in not  only identifying sales trends but also in providing individual customer  service, according to Arcules, a Canon group company based in Irvine, Calif.
In a post on the company's Web site, Andreas Pettersson, Arcules CEO, offered a real life  example of how the AI-powered video platform can work in customer service.
"One French bookstore applied behavioral analytics to its  video feeds to analyze shopper movements and facial expressions as they perused  the brick-and-mortar shop," he writes. "The analytics software looked for  reactions like surprise or hesitation, notifying the store's employees when  cameras detected those emotions. This allowed clerks to intervene and help  frustrated customers before they took their business elsewhere."
Even in the more traditional surveillance mode, AI-powered  video cameras can provide added functionality, Pettersson writes: "Similarly,  convenience stores like Amazon Go employ cameras with advanced object recognition  software to confirm which items shoppers pick and ensure proper payment.  Powered by deep learning technology, Amazon's store cameras use complex  pattern recognition to detect when products are taken off the shelf. The  cameras can even track when a customer put objects back. While the cameras  double as a means to prevent shoplifting, their primary function is to improve  the customer experience and support Amazon's mission of providing unmatched  convenience for shoppers."
The advances in CCTV technology are due to two factors,  according to Pettersson.
  - Advanced object detection: With previous  technology the cameras were only able to do limited object detection, such as  distinguishing between a person walking and a car driving. "Deep learning  algorithms now enable video monitoring systems to figure out specific details  about what cameras are seeing. This includes more granular information such as  if the person in the video is a woman or a man, and what color his or her  clothes are," he writes.
 
  - In-depth behavioral analysis: Previously, human  operators had to view video recordings to try to figure out emotions or  reactions from facial expressions caught on camera. "Analytics technology can  now teach cameras how to read micro-expressions, helping marketers and  behavioral analysts alike understand how their customers feel during their  experience. Smart cameras, for example, can determine if a shopper is excited  or confused when presented with different retail advertisements or product  displays."
 
The breakthroughs producing the Arcules video platform,  according to Pettersson, comes from technology moving beyond the rule-based  algorithms that have provided video analysis in the past to now making use of AI  and machine learning so "cameras get a 'brain.'" 
Arcules' announcement of its platform said that it is "powered  by technology from Milestone Systems, the global industry leader in video  management software." Milestone XProtect is open video management software (VMS)  with published APIs that allow developers to modify the platform for their own  projects, according to the Milestone Web site.  "The Milestone open platform enables you to add custom, best-in-class security  solutions to your surveillance, such as access control, cameras and video  analytics," the company explains.