The present invention pertains to an anti-theft system intended to protect goods for sale from theft, and in particular to a burglar-alarm system utilizing an alarm to be emitted by an alarm unit attached to such goods.
An anti-theft system such as that illustrated in
Such a conventional anti-theft system consists of a theft prevention gate 30 installed near an exit 40 of the store and an alarm unit 20 attached to an article 50. The theft prevention gate 30 incorporates a circuit board 31 and a transmission antenna (not shown), and the circuit board 31 is provided with a transmitting circuit (not shown) which transmits an alarm activation signal to the alarm unit 20.
As indicated in
At a retail store, the article 50 with the alarm unit 20 affixed thereto is displayed on a rack. When a sales clerk sells the article 50 to a customer (s), he first sends a specified reset signal from an alarm deactivation device (not shown) to the circuit board 23 of the alarm unit 20 to set the alarm unit such that the buzzer 22 will not be activated, then removes the alarm unit 20 from the article 50 and hands the article 50 to the customer when payment is made.
On the contrary, when the alarm unit 20 is removed from the article 50 by a customer, the alarm activation switch piece 25 is also removed and the buzzer 22 is activated. Further, in a case that a customer leaves a store premises taking away the article 50 with the alarm unit 20 still attached thereto, the circuit board 23 of the alarm unit 20 receives an alarm activation signal from the transmission antenna of the theft prevention gate 30, in response to which the buzzer 22 is activated.
However, a checkout counter is usually at the back of a store, far away from the exit 40 of the store where the theft prevention gate 30 is installed and therefore, an alarm from the buzzer 22 that goes off at the exit 40 may not be readily audible from the checkout counter, especially in an environment where the back ground music is present or where many customers are present, etc.
With a view to solving the problem of the anti-theft device described above, a burglar alarm system such as illustrated in
Such a system as described above, however, suffers from a problem in that it may not be able to discriminate an external noise similar to that generated by an alarm, such as background music, ambient noise, etc. from a legitimate alarm or may mistake reverberations of an alarm for an external noise.
The present invention provides a burglar-alarm system capable of accurately identifying an external noise approximate to an alarm such as background music, ambient noise, etc. and reverberations of an alarm attributable to an architectural design of an interior of a store, etc.
A burglar-alarm system of the present invention comprises an alarm unit attached to an object to be protected from theft to intermittently emit an alarm of a certain frequency upon the occurrence of theft and an alarm sensor for sensing an alarm from the alarm unit and generating an alarm signal, wherein said alarm sensor has first and second determination means for evaluating an input signal containing said alarm and external noises and the first determination means determines if the input signal contains random external noises while the second determination means determines if the input signal contains reflected sound caused by reverberation of said alarm and if the first and second determination means both determine that the input signal is a legitimate alarm, an alarm signal is generated.
In
At step S1, external noise and reverberations of the alarm are added to the alarm from the alarm unit to form an input signal whose sound pressure value fluctuates as described in
At step S2, the input signal (
At steps S3˜S7, the input sound containing the alarm and external noises is evaluated. More specifically, at steps S4 and S5, an evaluation of input sound with respect to external noises is conducted where a frequency of the input signal is measured. At steps S6 and S7, an evaluation of input sound with respect to reverberations of the alarm is conducted where a rise time of the detected signal is measured. In determining whether or not an input signal contains external noises, the present system measures the time more than once during which a predetermined number of pulses are obtained and determines from a differential between the measured times whether or not the input signal is the alarm or external noise, utilizing the fact that the alarm emitted from the alarm unit has a certain frequency f whereas an external noise does not have such a certain frequency and furthermore, a frequency of an external noise greatly fluctuates during a period of time for a few tens of pulses to be generated. As for an evaluation with respect to reverberations of the alarm, the present system determines whether or not input sound contains reverberations of the alarm based on the fact that although a sound pressure value of reverberations of the alarm contained in an input signal fluctuates in various fashions depending on the architectural design of the interior of a store, mode of installation of the present burglar-alarm system, etc., the input signal is always a standing wave of the same pattern in the same environment.
Hereafter, an embodiment of the present invention will be described.
At steps S4 and S5, a frequency of the input signal b2 is determined. At step S4, it is determined whether or not the wave-shaped input signal b2 is the alarm (frequency f: 3.125 KHz). When the input signal passes through the filter circuit at step S2, the filter circuit only eliminates external noises whose frequencies are greatly different from the frequency of the alarm and does not eliminate external noises whose frequencies are in the neighborhood of the frequency of the alarm.
Therefore, as is indicated in
Since a frequency of the alarm is approximately 3 KHz, it takes about 10 milliseconds for thirty waves of the input signal to be counted, and as measurement is conducted four times, approximately 40 milliseconds would be required. Therefore, T2 of 50 milliseconds is long enough for the measurement to be conducted four times. It is needless to say, however, that how many times the measurement is conducted merely constitutes a design condition that can be modified as needed.
At step S5, the differentials between the measured times (t11−t10, t12−t11, t13−t12, t14−t13) are respectively calculated and if it transpires that each differential does not exceed the predetermined time to be counted at the frequency of the legitimate alarm, it is determined that the frequency of the input signal is the frequency of the alarm and the procedure goes to the next step. On the other hand, if it transpires that even one of the differentials exceeds the predetermined time, it is determined that the input signal is an external noise and the procedure goes back to step S0 for standby mode.
At steps S6 and S7, the detected signal c is evaluated. At step S6, a rise time of each detected signal between the evaluation start point A where a detected signal rises and the point B where another detected signal rises after time for the single intermittent waveform cycle of the alarm from the alarm unit has passed is measured (t1, t2, t3, t4).
Similarly, a rise time of each detected signal during the next single intermittent waveform cycle of the alarm from the alarm unit is measured (t11, t21, t31, t41).
At step S7, the differentials between the measured times for the respective detected signals in the two intermittent waveform cycles are calculated (t11−t1, t21−t2, t31−t3, t41−t4), whereby cycles (T11, T21, T31, T41) for the respective detected signals are evaluated.
In other words, it is determined whether each of the cycles (T11, T21, T31, T41) of the respective detected signals does not exceed the cycle of the intermittent wave of the alarm (T1±α, where α is error time, for example, 10 milliseconds). If it transpires that each time cycle is within T1±10 milliseconds, it is determined that the detected signals are the alarm. On the contrary, if it transpires that each time cycle is not within T1±10 milliseconds, it is determined that the detected signals are an external noise and the procedure goes back to the standby mode step S0.
Although the operations for the steps S4˜S5 and the operations for the steps S6˜S7 are performed in the order of S4˜S5 and S6˜S7 in the above embodiment, the operations for the steps S4˜S5 and the operations for the steps S6˜S7 may be performed concurrently or in the reversed order of S6˜S7 and S4˜S5.
At step S9, the alarm sensor issues an alarm signal, which is sent through a wire or by wireless connection to a speaker, lamp, etc. disposed at the checkout counter to alert store personnel. Since an alarm signal can be stopped by any known means such as a switch, transmission of a stop signal, etc., it will not be described further in this text.
Further, step S7 in the processing flowchart of the above embodiment may be followed by an additional step S8, where optional sensitivity levels (for example, High=no repeats 0, Middle=repeat once 1, Low=repeat twice 2) are set to add another evaluation condition (indicated by the broken line in
Still further, although the number of times that a frequency of received sound is evaluated may be changed according to a pattern of a detected signal in the above-described embodiment, it is a matter of design variation and evidently, it may be changed in various other ways.
Still further, in evaluating detected signals, a time cycle of each received signal in a single intermittent waveform cycle of the alarm is evaluated in the above embodiment. However, it is not limited to the above mode of embodiment as long as it is possible to determine that a rise time of each received signal in a single intermittent waveform cycle is the same in every intermittent cycle.
The present invention is in no way restricted by the disclosed embodiment and other modifications and variations will be apparent to persons skilled in the art. The present invention is restricted only by the scope of the claims of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2001-211659 | Jul 2001 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/JP02/06895 | 7/8/2002 | WO | 00 | 9/13/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO03/007260 | 1/23/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5451929 | Adelman et al. | Sep 1995 | A |
20050099296 | Matsudaira et al. | May 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050030173 A1 | Feb 2005 | US |