150 research outputs found

    Remote Sensing Object Detection Meets Deep Learning: A Meta-review of Challenges and Advances

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    Remote sensing object detection (RSOD), one of the most fundamental and challenging tasks in the remote sensing field, has received longstanding attention. In recent years, deep learning techniques have demonstrated robust feature representation capabilities and led to a big leap in the development of RSOD techniques. In this era of rapid technical evolution, this review aims to present a comprehensive review of the recent achievements in deep learning based RSOD methods. More than 300 papers are covered in this review. We identify five main challenges in RSOD, including multi-scale object detection, rotated object detection, weak object detection, tiny object detection, and object detection with limited supervision, and systematically review the corresponding methods developed in a hierarchical division manner. We also review the widely used benchmark datasets and evaluation metrics within the field of RSOD, as well as the application scenarios for RSOD. Future research directions are provided for further promoting the research in RSOD.Comment: Accepted with IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Magazine. More than 300 papers relevant to the RSOD filed were reviewed in this surve

    Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) Meets Deep Learning

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    This reprint focuses on the application of the combination of synthetic aperture radars and depth learning technology. It aims to further promote the development of SAR image intelligent interpretation technology. A synthetic aperture radar (SAR) is an important active microwave imaging sensor, whose all-day and all-weather working capacity give it an important place in the remote sensing community. Since the United States launched the first SAR satellite, SAR has received much attention in the remote sensing community, e.g., in geological exploration, topographic mapping, disaster forecast, and traffic monitoring. It is valuable and meaningful, therefore, to study SAR-based remote sensing applications. In recent years, deep learning represented by convolution neural networks has promoted significant progress in the computer vision community, e.g., in face recognition, the driverless field and Internet of things (IoT). Deep learning can enable computational models with multiple processing layers to learn data representations with multiple-level abstractions. This can greatly improve the performance of various applications. This reprint provides a platform for researchers to handle the above significant challenges and present their innovative and cutting-edge research results when applying deep learning to SAR in various manuscript types, e.g., articles, letters, reviews and technical reports

    Anchor-free Convolutional Network with Dense Attention Feature Aggregation for Ship Detection in SAR Images

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    In recent years, with the improvement of synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imaging resolution, it is urgent to develop methods with higher accuracy and faster speed for ship detection in high-resolution SAR images. Among all kinds of methods, deep-learning-based algorithms bring promising performance due to end-to-end detection and automated feature extraction. However, several challenges still exist: (1) standard deep learning detectors based on anchors have certain unsolved problems, such as tuning of anchor-related parameters, scale-variation and high computational costs. (2) SAR data is huge but the labeled data is relatively small, which may lead to overfitting in training. (3) To improve detection speed, deep learning detectors generally detect targets based on low-resolution features, which may cause missed detections for small targets. In order to address the above problems, an anchor-free convolutional network with dense attention feature aggregation is proposed in this paper. Firstly, we use a lightweight feature extractor to extract multiscale ship features. The inverted residual blocks with depth-wise separable convolution reduce the network parameters and improve the detection speed. Secondly, a novel feature aggregation scheme called dense attention feature aggregation (DAFA) is proposed to obtain a high-resolution feature map with multiscale information. By combining the multiscale features through dense connections and iterative fusions, DAFA improves the generalization performance of the network. In addition, an attention block, namely spatial and channel squeeze and excitation (SCSE) block is embedded in the upsampling process of DAFA to enhance the salient features of the target and suppress the background clutters. Third, an anchor-free detector, which is a center-point-based ship predictor (CSP), is adopted in this paper. CSP regresses the ship centers and ship sizes simultaneously on the high-resolution feature map to implement anchor-free and nonmaximum suppression (NMS)-free ship detection. The experiments on the AirSARShip-1.0 dataset demonstrate the effectiveness of our method. The results show that the proposed method outperforms several mainstream detection algorithms in both accuracy and speed

    Towards Large-Scale Small Object Detection: Survey and Benchmarks

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    With the rise of deep convolutional neural networks, object detection has achieved prominent advances in past years. However, such prosperity could not camouflage the unsatisfactory situation of Small Object Detection (SOD), one of the notoriously challenging tasks in computer vision, owing to the poor visual appearance and noisy representation caused by the intrinsic structure of small targets. In addition, large-scale dataset for benchmarking small object detection methods remains a bottleneck. In this paper, we first conduct a thorough review of small object detection. Then, to catalyze the development of SOD, we construct two large-scale Small Object Detection dAtasets (SODA), SODA-D and SODA-A, which focus on the Driving and Aerial scenarios respectively. SODA-D includes 24828 high-quality traffic images and 278433 instances of nine categories. For SODA-A, we harvest 2513 high resolution aerial images and annotate 872069 instances over nine classes. The proposed datasets, as we know, are the first-ever attempt to large-scale benchmarks with a vast collection of exhaustively annotated instances tailored for multi-category SOD. Finally, we evaluate the performance of mainstream methods on SODA. We expect the released benchmarks could facilitate the development of SOD and spawn more breakthroughs in this field. Datasets and codes are available at: \url{https://shaunyuan22.github.io/SODA}

    Object Detection in 20 Years: A Survey

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    Object detection, as of one the most fundamental and challenging problems in computer vision, has received great attention in recent years. Its development in the past two decades can be regarded as an epitome of computer vision history. If we think of today's object detection as a technical aesthetics under the power of deep learning, then turning back the clock 20 years we would witness the wisdom of cold weapon era. This paper extensively reviews 400+ papers of object detection in the light of its technical evolution, spanning over a quarter-century's time (from the 1990s to 2019). A number of topics have been covered in this paper, including the milestone detectors in history, detection datasets, metrics, fundamental building blocks of the detection system, speed up techniques, and the recent state of the art detection methods. This paper also reviews some important detection applications, such as pedestrian detection, face detection, text detection, etc, and makes an in-deep analysis of their challenges as well as technical improvements in recent years.Comment: This work has been submitted to the IEEE TPAMI for possible publicatio

    A Comprehensive Review of YOLO: From YOLOv1 and Beyond

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    YOLO has become a central real-time object detection system for robotics, driverless cars, and video monitoring applications. We present a comprehensive analysis of YOLO's evolution, examining the innovations and contributions in each iteration from the original YOLO to YOLOv8 and YOLO-NAS. We start by describing the standard metrics and postprocessing; then, we discuss the major changes in network architecture and training tricks for each model. Finally, we summarize the essential lessons from YOLO's development and provide a perspective on its future, highlighting potential research directions to enhance real-time object detection systems.Comment: 31 pages, 15 figures, 4 tables, submitted to ACM Computing Surveys This version includes YOLO-NAS and a more detailed description of YOLOv5 and YOLOv8. It also adds three new diagrams for the architectures of YOLOv5, YOLOv8, and YOLO-NA

    Closely arranged inshore ship detection using a bi-directional attention feature pyramid network

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    The detection of inshore ships in Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images is seriously disturbed by shore buildings, especially for closely arranged inshore ships whose appearance is similar when compared with detection of deep-sea ships. There are many interference factors such as speckle noise, cross sidelobes, and defocusing in SAR images. These factors can seriously interfere with feature extraction, and the traditional Fully Convolutional One-Stage (FCOS) network often cannot effectively distinguish small-scale ships from backgrounds. Additionally, for closely arranged inshore ships, missed detections and inaccurate positioning often occur. In this paper, a method of inshore ship detection based on Bi-directional Attention Feature Pyramid Network (BAFPN) is proposed. In order to improve the detection ability of small-scale ships, the BAFPN is based on the FCOS network, which connects a Convolutional Block Attention Module (CBAM) to each feature map of the pyramid and can extract rich semantic features. Then, the idea from Path-Aggregation Network (PANet) is adopted to splice a bottom-up pyramid structure behind the original pyramid structure, further highlighting the features of different scales and improving the ability of the network to accurately locate ships under complex backgrounds, thereby avoiding missed detections in closely arranged inshore ship detection. Finally, a weighted feature fusion method is proposed, which makes the feature information extracted from the feature map have different focuses and can improve the accuracy of ship detection. Experiments on SAR image ship datasets show that the mAP for the SSDD and HRSID reached 0.902 and 0.839 respectively. The proposed method can effectively improve the ship positioning accuracy while maintaining a fast detection speed, and achieves better results for ship detection under complex background

    Oriented Object Detection in Optical Remote Sensing Images using Deep Learning: A Survey

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    Oriented object detection is one of the most fundamental and challenging tasks in remote sensing, aiming at locating the oriented objects of numerous predefined object categories. Recently, deep learning based methods have achieved remarkable performance in detecting oriented objects in optical remote sensing imagery. However, a thorough review of the literature in remote sensing has not yet emerged. Therefore, we give a comprehensive survey of recent advances and cover many aspects of oriented object detection, including problem definition, commonly used datasets, evaluation protocols, detection frameworks, oriented object representations, and feature representations. Besides, the state-of-the-art methods are analyzed and discussed. We finally discuss future research directions to put forward some useful research guidance. We believe that this survey shall be valuable to researchers across academia and industr

    Advances in Object and Activity Detection in Remote Sensing Imagery

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    The recent revolution in deep learning has enabled considerable development in the fields of object and activity detection. Visual object detection tries to find objects of target classes with precise localisation in an image and assign each object instance a corresponding class label. At the same time, activity recognition aims to determine the actions or activities of an agent or group of agents based on sensor or video observation data. It is a very important and challenging problem to detect, identify, track, and understand the behaviour of objects through images and videos taken by various cameras. Together, objects and their activity recognition in imaging data captured by remote sensing platforms is a highly dynamic and challenging research topic. During the last decade, there has been significant growth in the number of publications in the field of object and activity recognition. In particular, many researchers have proposed application domains to identify objects and their specific behaviours from air and spaceborne imagery. This Special Issue includes papers that explore novel and challenging topics for object and activity detection in remote sensing images and videos acquired by diverse platforms
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