Claims
- 1. A glass break detector for detecting the breaking of glass comprising an acoustic transducer which produces a wide band electrical signal in response to receipt of sound energy of a glass break event, a processing arrangement for analyzing the electrical signal of the acoustic transducer for detection of glass break events, said processing arrangement including means for detecting a sudden high amplitude transient event that could be caused by the initial portion of a glass break event, waiting a short period of time after detection of a sudden high amplitude transient event and thereafter sampling the signal over a further period of time which would include the high frequency glass shattering portion of a glass break event, said signal being sampled by dividing the signal into many short segments and analyzing each short segment for an assessment of the degree of randomness in the short segment, using the assessment of the short segments to distinguish periodic signals from glass break signals and upon recognition of a glass break signal producing an alarm signal.
- 2. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 1 wherein said processing arrangement includes a microprocessor which converts the electrical signal into bits during sampling and for each sample compares each bit to the following bit and records any change in the bit value as an assessment of the degree of change and accumulates the number of changes for each sample period.
- 3. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 2 wherein said microprocessor uses an exclusive OR function for evaluating changes between bits of a sample period.
- 4. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 3 wherein said microprocessor analyses the results of the samples with respect to distribution of the results and based on the characteristics of the distribution makes a prediction if a glass break event has been detected.
- 5. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 4 wherein the characteristics of the distribution include determination whether the modal value falls within a given range, an assessment of the range of the distribution and an assessment of the modal area.
- 6. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 2 wherein the signal from the acoustic transducer is converted to an 8 bit digital signal.
- 7. A glass break detector comprising
- means for detecting a sudden transient event which could be a glass break event and producing a signal derived from said transient event,
- means for sampling the signal after a specified delay to form successive experiment segments when a sudden transient event has been detected where each experiment segment comprises a series of many samples,
- means for evaluating the experiment segments using statistical techniques for characteristics which distinguish periodic signal sources from glass break event signals which are not periodic,
- and means for producing an alarm when said means for evaluating indicates the signal is not periodic.
- 8. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 7 wherein said specified delay is sufficient to allow bodies which have been struck thus producing a sudden transient signal to resonate.
- 9. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 7 wherein said statistical techniques include comparison of past values of the signal to future values of the signal.
- 10. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 9 wherein said statistical techniques include autocorrelation.
- 11. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 10 wherein autocorrelation is carried out on each experiment segment whereafter the distribution of the auto correlation results are compared.
- 12. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 9 wherein said specified delay is approximately 50 milliseconds and each experiment segment is of a duration of at least 2.5 milliseconds.
- 13. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 12 wherein about 30 experiment segments are analysed.
- 14. A method of detecting the breaking of glass comprising using a microphone to detect sound in an area to be monitored, using an analog to digital converter to convert the signal from the microphone to a series of bits, analysing the series of bits over time to determine a measure of change in amplitude occurring in the signal in a first experiment, repeating the experiment many times, determining the distribution of changes in amplitude of the experiments and determining if the distribution is indicative of a glass break event by using the distribution to determine other statistical factors which assist in distinguishing a glass break event from other transient events.
- 15. A method as claimed in claim 14 wherein said statistical factors include determining the mode, range and mean of the distribution.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a continuation-in-part of PCT application Ser. No. PCT/CA95/00122, filed Mar. 3, 1995, claiming a priority date of Mar. 4, 1994, which application designated the United States.
US Referenced Citations (4)