| Paint-based graffiti can usually be removed relatively easily from
buildings, bus shelters and other street furniture. But graffiti that is
scratched into surfaces such as Perspex is much more difficult to cope
with and usually requires the entire surface to be replaced at great
cost.
So researchers at Curtin University of Technology in Perth, Australia,
have developed a device that can hear when graffiti is being carved into
surfaces. A set of microphones attached to the surface is connected to a
computer program that has been trained to distinguish background noise
from the tell-tale signature of graffiti scratches. When the computer
picks up signs of vandalism in action, it triggers an alarm to scare off
the perpetrators and call the authorities to investigate. |