Abstract As video surveillance systems are widely deployed, concerns continue to grow about invasion of privacy. We have built a privacy protected video surveillance system called PriSurv. Although PriSurv protects subject privacy using image processing, criteria of controlling the subject's visual information that is privacy-sensitive should be clarified. Visual information must be disclosed by considering the trade-off between privacy and security. The level of privacy-sensitive visual information that could be disclosed to a viewer is simply called disclosable privacy in this chapter. Disclosable privacy, which deeply involves the personal sense, is affected by many factors. A sense of privacy is individual, but in some cases it might have common factors. A sense of privacy is individual, but in some cases it might have common factors. In this chapter, we analyze what factors determine and affect disclosable privacy by applying statistical analysis to questionnaire-based experimental results. These results indicate that disclosable privacy is concerned with how much a subject has feeling of closeness to a viewer and expects the viewer's responsibility. They also show that disclosable privacy differs greatly by individuals. Reflecting the obtained findings in PriSurv's design, we adapt PriSurv to reflect a personal sense of privacy. © 2009 Springer London.
CITATION STYLE
Babaguchi, N., Koshimizu, T., Umata, I., & Toriyama, T. (2009). Psychological study for designing privacy protected video surveillance system: PriSurv. In Protecting Privacy in Video Surveillance (pp. 147–164). Springer London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-84882-301-3_9
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