South China Morning Post

‘Invisibili­ty cloak’ blinds security cameras

- Zhang Tong richard.zhang@scmp.com

Several Chinese graduate students have invented a plain-looking, low-cost coat that can hide the human body, day or night, from security cameras monitored by artificial intelligen­ce (AI), according to the team.

The InvisDefen­se coat can be seen by human eyes but is covered in a pattern that blinds cameras during daytime and sends out unusual heat signals at night, according to the team.

The students’ project won first prize in a creative work contest on November 27 sponsored by Huawei Technologi­es Co as part of the China Postgradua­te Innovation and Practice Competitio­ns.

The project was overseen by Professor Wang Zheng, of the school of computer science at Wuhan University, and the developers’ paper on the invention has been accepted by AAAI 2023, a top academic conference on artificial intelligen­ce.

“Nowadays, many surveillan­ce devices can detect human bodies. Cameras on the road have pedestrian detection functions and smart cars can identify pedestrian­s, roads and obstacles. Our InvisDefen­se allows the camera to capture you, but it cannot tell if you are human,” Wang said.

During the day, cameras often detect human bodies through motion and contour recognitio­n.

Bearing a specially designed camouflage pattern on its surface, the InvisDefen­se can interfere with the recognitio­n algorithm of machine vision, effectivel­y blinding the camera so it cannot identify the wearer as a person.

At night, the camera tracks human bodies through infrared thermal imaging. Irregularl­y shaped temperatur­e-controllin­g modules nestled on the inner surface of InvisDefen­se create an unusual temperatur­e pattern that confuses the infrared camera.

“The most difficult part is the balance of the camouflage pattern. Traditiona­lly, researcher­s used bright images to interfere with machine vision and it did work. But it stands out to human eyes, making the user even more conspicuou­s,” said Wei Hui, a PhD student in the team responsibl­e for the core algorithm.

“We use algorithms to design the least conspicuou­s patterns that can disable computer vision.”

The team carried out hundreds of tests over three months before coming up with the best pattern.

Another advantage of InvisDefen­se is its low cost.

Printing a pattern on the surface is relatively cheap, and only four temperatur­e control modules are needed to blind the infrared camera.

“The cost of a complete set of InvisDefen­se is less than 500 yuan (HK$558),” Wang said.

“This is the first product in the industry that can avoid public pedestrian detection and does not arouse suspicion from human eyes. Through campus testing, the accuracy of pedestrian detection can be reduced by 57 per cent – that number could be even higher in the future,” Wang said.

“Our results prove there are still loopholes in current artificial intelligen­ce technology and computer recognitio­n technology, researcher­s could use our algorithms to improve current models,” Wang said.

“InvisDefen­se might also be used in anti-drone combat or human-machine confrontat­ion on the battlefiel­d.”

 ?? Photo: Weibo ?? The InvisDefen­se coat is covered in a pattern that blinds cameras run by artificial intelligen­ce.
Photo: Weibo The InvisDefen­se coat is covered in a pattern that blinds cameras run by artificial intelligen­ce.

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