Manual
www.acti.com
  Firmware User’s Manual V6.09.45 
68 
Trigger threshold   
Look at the moving object entering the 
area  of  motion  detection:  although 
moving quite slowly, it caused motion 
activity  –  several  pixel  regions 
reported a motion that was faster than 
allowed “speed limit” of sensitivity (70). 
The  blue  graph  on  the  right  side  of 
the image shows how many percent 
of pixels within the motion detection 
region were considered as “currently in motion”. The activity panel itself is a timeline – for each 
moment of time you can see the height of the blue bars. You may notice that at certain moment 
the tallest bars in the activity graph reached about 25% (a quarter of the total height in activity 
panel) – it means, 25% of this motion detection area were filled with moving pixels at that moment. 
By visual observation you can also see that the object standing inside the motion detection region 
indeed covers about 25% of its size.   
What if the object is really small but moves rather fast (gets triggered by the current sensitivity 
level)? For example, we want to detect people but not the cat walking in the room. Although both 
people  and  cat  may move  with  the  speed that  will  trigger  motion, they have  different  size  of 
triggered pixels. For example, a human passing by the motion detection region will trigger 25% of 
pixels in that region while the cat would trigger only 2%. Since we want to have a real alarm in 
case of human or vehicle passing by while ignoring birds, cats, butterflies, mice, etc, we need a 
filter that can define how many percent of triggered pixels will be considered as a real alarm. This 
parameter is called trigger threshold. The default value of trigger threshold is 10%. It means, 
only the objects that are bigger than 10% of the motion detection region size and move faster 
than allowed by sensitivity level (70) will produce actual alarm. 
How to choose the most optimal trigger threshold level? The rule of thumb,  keep the trigger 
threshold as small as possible while not causing false alarms by the moving objects that 
are not humans or vehicles. 
You  can  have  different  sensitivity  level  and  trigger  threshold  level  for  each  motion  detection 
region. 
In order to understand all of the above even better, please refer to the table below containing four 










