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DRONET: Multi-Tasking Framework for Real-Time Industrial Facility Aerial Surveillance and Safetyopen access

Authors
Ajakwe, Simeon OkechukwuIhekoronye, Vivian UkamakaKim, Dong-SeongLee, Jae Min
Issue Date
Feb-2022
Publisher
MDPI
Keywords
aerial surveillance; anti-drone communication; drone detection; deep learning; facility; security; weapons
Citation
DRONES, v.6, no.2
Journal Title
DRONES
Volume
6
Number
2
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/kumoh/handle/2020.sw.kumoh/21031
DOI
10.3390/drones6020046
ISSN
2504-446X
Abstract
The security of key and critical infrastructures is crucial for uninterrupted industrial process flow needed in strategic management as these facilities are major targets of invaders. The emergence of non-military use of drones especially for logistics comes with the challenge of redefining the anti-drone approach in determining a drone's harmful status in the airspace based on certain metrics before countering it. In this work, a vision-based multi-tasking anti-drone framework is proposed to detect drones, identifies the airborne objects, determines its harmful status through perceived threat analysis, and checks its proximity in real-time prior to taking an action. The model is validated using manually generated 5460 drone samples from six (6) drone models under sunny, cloudy, and evening scenarios and 1709 airborne objects samples of seven (7) classes under different environments, scenarios (blur, scales, low illumination), and heights. The proposed model was compared with seven (7) other object detection models in terms of accuracy, sensitivity, F1-score, latency, throughput, reliability, and efficiency. The simulation result reveals that, overall, the proposed model achieved superior multi-drone detection accuracy of 99.6%, attached object identification of sensitivity of 99.80%, and F1-score of 99.69%, with minimal error, low latency, and less computational complexity needed for effective industrial facility aerial surveillance. A benchmark dataset is also provided for subsequent performance evaluation of other object detection models.
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