If it was for the store then you'd do one or more stationary mounts of something better and more purpose-built than a camera phone. Or something even simpler like counting bodies in and out at the door with the door dinger thing.
So I assume it's for surveilling the store surreptitiously, right?
I suppose it's an interesting problem for the machine vision people. But how do you deal with people down the aisles that you can't see? How do you avoid looking like you're collecting upskirts or kiddie porn? How do you avoid just plain getting your face punched in?
Is there a way to count cell phone signals, from your own phone or from special equipment? There were stories a year or so ago about some mall that was going to track individual phones through the mall, to discern shopping patterns and such. I imagine it's not impossible to create something that you could use surreptitiously (again, I'm assuming).
Well, you probably don't mean you can set up a stationary camera as if so then you could just install some sensor at the door or a foot pad.
But if you could mount a phone...
Maybe some technique where you take a baseline photo with the store empty and then compare that to ones with people in it. You'd have to account for natural changes in light and ignore that in the algorithm. Shadows and bags would be difficult. Then count the number of changed pixels from baseline, the average number of pixels representing a person, and some sort of edge detection for added checking.
Or, a mechanical turk worker would solve this in a few seconds for probably a penny.
Assuming your phone/camera is mounted in a stationary position, you could track all the moving objects fairly easily with background subtraction. I say "fairly" because you'd likely have to incorporate motion, color and texture detection to disambiguate between different people. A count of the moving blobs would give you a rough number of the people in a store. It would be an instantaneous count, so you'd probably have to take a moving average of the time series of the number of people detected to get a reasonably accurate value. Non-trivial, but doable.
This only works when people are separate enough so they have an individual silhouette. If doing length of line tracking however, it becomes much more tedious, with edge detection necessary and such. Also, if using a 360 camera, this becomes more complex, as a person in the middle blob shape would be completely different from a person at the edge. I am aware you can use a filter, but it cuts out some area sometimes.
This is a surprisingly hard problem that I've explored before. Feel free to email me about it!
I think some sort of Camera to radio detection system, chances are every person carries a phone and then synchronize them to count matching parameters (if the image is moving radio field will change)
If it was for the store then you'd do one or more stationary mounts of something better and more purpose-built than a camera phone. Or something even simpler like counting bodies in and out at the door with the door dinger thing.
So I assume it's for surveilling the store surreptitiously, right?
I suppose it's an interesting problem for the machine vision people. But how do you deal with people down the aisles that you can't see? How do you avoid looking like you're collecting upskirts or kiddie porn? How do you avoid just plain getting your face punched in?
Is there a way to count cell phone signals, from your own phone or from special equipment? There were stories a year or so ago about some mall that was going to track individual phones through the mall, to discern shopping patterns and such. I imagine it's not impossible to create something that you could use surreptitiously (again, I'm assuming).