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Why this matters
Accurate occupancy data is foundational to energy optimization, space utilization, safety, and scheduling.
When ghost detections occur they can cause:
- Inaccurate energy savings estimates and misconfigured HVAC schedules.
 - Misleading space utilization reports that hurt planning and budgeting.
 - False alarms in security or safety monitoring.
 
Building managers and facility teams need reliable, privacy-preserving sensing that minimizes false counts while integrating with building systems.
What are ghost detections? A plain-language definition
A ghost detection is a recorded presence that does not correspond to an actual person.
Ghosts can be:
- Persistent false targets recorded as occupants.
 - Short-lived blips caused by reflections, environmental changes, or sensor noise.
 - Duplicate counts that arise when a single person is detected multiple times by overlapping sensors.
 
These artifacts are distinct from missed detections; both reduce the usefulness of occupancy analytics but require different fixes.
Which sensor types commonly produce ghosts
Some sensing technologies are more prone to ghosting because of how they detect people:
Radar and microwave sensors
- Can detect reflections from metallic surfaces, ducts, or machinery, creating multipath signals.
 
Depth cameras and stereo vision
- Reflections, glass, or lighting changes can produce phantom points in depth maps.
 
Passive infrared (PIR) with narrow coverage
- Sudden temperature changes or direct sunlight can trigger transient firings.
 
Stereo/structured light devices
- Sensitive to ambient IR and reflective materials, especially in cluttered rooms.
 
By contrast, heat-based thermal sensing tends to be more robust to optical reflections and some types of multipath interference.