258 research outputs found

    SAR Image Edge Detection: Review and Benchmark Experiments

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    Edges are distinct geometric features crucial to higher level object detection and recognition in remote-sensing processing, which is a key for surveillance and gathering up-to-date geospatial intelligence. Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) is a powerful form of remote-sensing. However, edge detectors designed for optical images tend to have low performance on SAR images due to the presence of the strong speckle noise-causing false-positives (type I errors). Therefore, many researchers have proposed edge detectors that are tailored to deal with the SAR image characteristics specifically. Although these edge detectors might achieve effective results on their own evaluations, the comparisons tend to include a very limited number of (simulated) SAR images. As a result, the generalized performance of the proposed methods is not truly reflected, as real-world patterns are much more complex and diverse. From this emerges another problem, namely, a quantitative benchmark is missing in the field. Hence, it is not currently possible to fairly evaluate any edge detection method for SAR images. Thus, in this paper, we aim to close the aforementioned gaps by providing an extensive experimental evaluation for SAR images on edge detection. To that end, we propose the first benchmark on SAR image edge detection methods established by evaluating various freely available methods, including methods that are considered to be the state of the art

    A Self-Organizing Neural System for Learning to Recognize Textured Scenes

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    A self-organizing ARTEX model is developed to categorize and classify textured image regions. ARTEX specializes the FACADE model of how the visual cortex sees, and the ART model of how temporal and prefrontal cortices interact with the hippocampal system to learn visual recognition categories and their names. FACADE processing generates a vector of boundary and surface properties, notably texture and brightness properties, by utilizing multi-scale filtering, competition, and diffusive filling-in. Its context-sensitive local measures of textured scenes can be used to recognize scenic properties that gradually change across space, as well a.s abrupt texture boundaries. ART incrementally learns recognition categories that classify FACADE output vectors, class names of these categories, and their probabilities. Top-down expectations within ART encode learned prototypes that pay attention to expected visual features. When novel visual information creates a poor match with the best existing category prototype, a memory search selects a new category with which classify the novel data. ARTEX is compared with psychophysical data, and is benchmarked on classification of natural textures and synthetic aperture radar images. It outperforms state-of-the-art systems that use rule-based, backpropagation, and K-nearest neighbor classifiers.Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency; Office of Naval Research (N00014-95-1-0409, N00014-95-1-0657

    MULTI-TEMPORAL AND MULTI-SENSOR IMAGE MATCHING BASED ON LOCAL FREQUENCY INFORMATION

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    Robust unsupervised small area change detection from SAR imagery using deep learning

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    Small area change detection using synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery is a highly challenging task, due to speckle noise and imbalance between classes (changed and unchanged). In this paper, a robust unsupervised approach is proposed for small area change detection using deep learning techniques. First, a multi-scale superpixel reconstruction method is developed to generate a difference image (DI), which can suppress the speckle noise effectively and enhance edges by exploiting local, spatially homogeneous information. Second, a two-stage centre-constrained fuzzy c-means clustering algorithm is proposed to divide the pixels of the DI into changed, unchanged and intermediate classes with a parallel clustering strategy. Image patches belonging to the first two classes are then constructed as pseudo-label training samples, and image patches of the intermediate class are treated as testing samples. Finally, a convolutional wavelet neural network (CWNN) is designed and trained to classify testing samples into changed or unchanged classes, coupled with a deep convolutional generative adversarial network (DCGAN) to increase the number of changed class within the pseudo-label training samples. Numerical experiments on four real SAR datasets demonstrate the validity and robustness of the proposed approach, achieving up to 99.61% accuracy for small area change detection

    A Self-Organizing System for Classifying Complex Images: Natural Textures and Synthetic Aperture Radar

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    A self-organizing architecture is developed for image region classification. The system consists of a preprocessor that utilizes multi-scale filtering, competition, cooperation, and diffusion to compute a vector of image boundary and surface properties, notably texture and brightness properties. This vector inputs to a system that incrementally learns noisy multidimensional mappings and their probabilities. The architecture is applied to difficult real-world image classification problems, including classification of synthetic aperture radar and natural texture images, and outperforms a recent state-of-the-art system at classifying natural texturns.Office of Naval Research (N00014-95-1-0409, N00014-95-1-0657, N00014-91-J-4100); Advanced Research Projects Agency (N00014-92-J-4015); Air Force Office of Scientific Research (F49620-92-J-0225, F49620-92-J-0334); National Science Foundation (IRI-90-00530, IRI-90-24877

    A Self-Organizing System for Classifying Complex Images: Natural Textures and Synthetic Aperture Radar

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    A self-organizing architecture is developed for image region classification. The system consists of a preprocessor that utilizes multi-scale filtering, competition, cooperation, and diffusion to compute a vector of image boundary and surface properties, notably texture and brightness properties. This vector inputs to a system that incrementally learns noisy multidimensional mappings and their probabilities. The architecture is applied to difficult real-world image classification problems, including classification of synthetic aperture radar and natural texture images, and outperforms a recent state-of-the-art system at classifying natural texturns.Office of Naval Research (N00014-95-1-0409, N00014-95-1-0657, N00014-91-J-4100); Advanced Research Projects Agency (N00014-92-J-4015); Air Force Office of Scientific Research (F49620-92-J-0225, F49620-92-J-0334); National Science Foundation (IRI-90-00530, IRI-90-24877

    Remote Sensing Application in the Maritime Search and Rescue

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    Multi-scale texture segmentation of synthetic aperture radar images

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    EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo

    Phase History Decomposition for Efficient Scatterer Classification in SAR Imagery

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    A new theory and algorithm for scatterer classification in SAR imagery is presented. The automated classification process is operationally efficient compared to existing image segmentation methods requiring human supervision. The algorithm reconstructs coarse resolution subimages from subdomains of the SAR phase history. It analyzes local peaks in the subimages to determine locations and geometric shapes of scatterers in the scene. Scatterer locations are indicated by the presence of a stable peak in all subimages for a given subaperture, while scatterer shapes are indicated by changes in pixel intensity. A new multi-peak model is developed from physical models of electromagnetic scattering to predict how pixel intensities behave for different scatterer shapes. The algorithm uses a least squares classifier to match observed pixel behavior to the model. Classification accuracy improves with increasing fractional bandwidth and is subject to the high-frequency and wide-aperture approximations of the multi-peak model. For superior computational efficiency, an integrated fast SAR imaging technique is developed to combine the coarse resolution subimages into a final SAR image having fine resolution. Finally, classification results are overlaid on the SAR image so that analysts can deduce the significance of the scatterer shape information within the image context
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