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, and a processing arrangement for analyzing the electrical signal of the acoustic transducer for possible detection of glass break events, said processing arrangement including means for detecting a sudden increase in strength of the signal indicative of a possible glass break event and producing an activation signal, an arrangement for dividing said electrical signal into a low frequency component and a high frequency component, a sampling arrangement for each of said high frequency component and said low frequency component activated by said activation signal, each sampling arrangement dividing the respective component into a plurality of sample periods, an arrangement for collectively analyzing the sample periods of each component and determining whether the respective component is considered random, a signal shape detecting arrangement which analyses said electrical signal for an envelope shape consistent with a glass break event, and an alarm signal generator which produces an alarm signal when the analysis of said electrical signal indicates each component is considered random and said envelope is consistent with a glass break event.
- 2. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 1 wherein said arrangement for analysing also assesses whether the components demonstrated randomness concurrently for at least some of the sample periods and said alarm signal generator additionally requires demonstrated concurrent randomness of said components to produce an alarm signal.
- 3. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 1 including having sufficient sample periods to analyze said signal for a time period of at least 250 msec.
- 4. A glass break event as claimed in claim 1 wherein said shape detection arrangement and said arrangement for analysing said components conducts a preliminary assessment of the envelope shape of said signal and the randomness of said components and only continues if the preliminary assessment confirms a rapid rise in the strength of the signal and some randomness of said components.
- 5. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 4 wherein said preliminary assessment uses about 10 msec of the wide band electrical signal.
- 6. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 4 wherein said preliminary assessment considers only said high frequency component to assess randomness.
- 7. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 4 including a delay means which introduces a minimum time delay period between activation signals.
- 8. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 7 wherein said minimum time delay is about 100 msec.
- 9. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 1 wherein said signal is assessed for a time period of at least 250 msec before an alarm signal can be produced.
- 10. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 1 wherein the sampling arrangement for the low frequency component has a lower sampling rate than the sampling rate used with respect to the high frequency component.
- 11. A glass break detector as claimed in claim 10 wherein the rate of sampling the high frequency component is at least three times the sampling rate of the low frequency component.
- 12. A method of detecting the breaking of glass comprising using a microphone to detect sound in an area to be monitored and produce a signal, filtering said signal to produce a low frequency component and a high frequency component, using analog to digital converters to convert both the high frequency and low frequency components to a high frequency component series of bits and a low frequency series of bits, analysing said signal to identify a sudden change in the signal indicative of a transient event,
- upon recognition of a transient event
- 1) analysing said series of bits of both the high frequency component and the low frequency component over a predetermined time period using sampling techniques to determine distribution of changes in amplitude of each component and whether the distribution indicates random changes in amplitude,
- 2) processing said signal to determine the envelope thereof over at least part of said predetermined period and determining whether the signal is representative of a glass break signal, and
- 3) producing an alarm when both the high and low components indicate random changes in amplitude, and the determined envelope is representative of a glass break signal.
- 13. A method as claimed in claim 12 including the step of assessing whether the high frequency and low frequency component demonstrate randomness concurrently for at least some of the sample periods and only producing an alarm when concurrent randomness is also found.
- 14. A method as claimed in claim 13 wherein said sampling techniques include considering said components for an extended time period of about 150 msec and wherein said low frequency component for the time period is subdivided into 8 segments having at least 10 samples, and each high frequency component for the time period is subdivided into 10 segments having at least 10 samples; using each segment to determine the number of times the samples of the segment change from a high to low level or low to high level, and the results from the segments are used to form a distribution from which a decision of whether each component is random is made.
- 15. A method as claimed in claim 13 including conducting a preliminary assessment using about 10 msec of the signal following a sudden change in the signal indicative of a transient event, said preliminary assessment eliminating signals which are clearly not of interest by testing the signal for the required initial rapid rise and for randomness in the distribution of changes in amplitude of the components.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 08/522,716 filed Sep. 1, 1995, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,675,320 which is a continuation-in-part of International Application No. PCT/CA95/00122 filed Mar. 3, 1995.
US Referenced Citations (9)
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
0233390 |
Aug 1987 |
EPX |
2284668 |
Jun 1995 |
GBX |
Continuation in Parts (2)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
522,716 |
Sep 1995 |
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Parent |
PCT/CA95/00122 |
Mar 1995 |
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