97 research outputs found
CAESAR source finder: recent developments and testing
A new era in radioastronomy will begin with the upcoming large-scale surveys
planned at the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP). ASKAP
started its Early Science program in October 2017 and several target fields
were observed during the array commissioning phase. The SCORPIO field was the
first observed in the Galactic Plane in Band 1 (792-1032 MHz) using 15
commissioned antennas. The achieved sensitivity and large field of view already
allow to discover new sources and survey thousands of existing ones with
improved precision with respect to previous surveys. Data analysis is currently
ongoing to deliver the first source catalogue. Given the increased scale of the
data, source extraction and characterization, even in this Early Science phase,
have to be carried out in a mostly automated way. This process presents
significant challenges due to the presence of extended objects and diffuse
emission close to the Galactic Plane. In this context we have extended and
optimized a novel source finding tool, named CAESAR , to allow extraction of
both compact and extended sources from radio maps. A number of developments
have been done driven by the analysis of the SCORPIO map and in view of the
future ASKAP Galactic Plane survey. The main goals are the improvement of
algorithm performances and scalability as well as of software maintainability
and usability within the radio community. In this paper we present the current
status of CAESAR and report a first systematic characterization of its
performance for both compact and extended sources using simulated maps. Future
prospects are discussed in light of the obtained results.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figure
Research on robust salient object extraction in image
制度:新 ; 文部省報告番号:甲2641号 ; 学位の種類:博士(工学) ; 授与年月日:2008/3/15 ; 早大学位記番号:新480
Very High Resolution (VHR) Satellite Imagery: Processing and Applications
Recently, growing interest in the use of remote sensing imagery has appeared to provide synoptic maps of water quality parameters in coastal and inner water ecosystems;, monitoring of complex land ecosystems for biodiversity conservation; precision agriculture for the management of soils, crops, and pests; urban planning; disaster monitoring, etc. However, for these maps to achieve their full potential, it is important to engage in periodic monitoring and analysis of multi-temporal changes. In this context, very high resolution (VHR) satellite-based optical, infrared, and radar imaging instruments provide reliable information to implement spatially-based conservation actions. Moreover, they enable observations of parameters of our environment at greater broader spatial and finer temporal scales than those allowed through field observation alone. In this sense, recent very high resolution satellite technologies and image processing algorithms present the opportunity to develop quantitative techniques that have the potential to improve upon traditional techniques in terms of cost, mapping fidelity, and objectivity. Typical applications include multi-temporal classification, recognition and tracking of specific patterns, multisensor data fusion, analysis of land/marine ecosystem processes and environment monitoring, etc. This book aims to collect new developments, methodologies, and applications of very high resolution satellite data for remote sensing. The works selected provide to the research community the most recent advances on all aspects of VHR satellite remote sensing
Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) Meets Deep Learning
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
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Video content analysis for automated detection and tracking of humans in CCTV surveillance applications
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.The problems of achieving high detection rate with low false alarm rate for human detection and tracking in video sequence, performance scalability, and improving response time are addressed in this thesis. The underlying causes are the effect of scene complexity, human-to-human interactions, scale changes, and scene background-human interactions. A two-stage processing solution, namely, human detection, and human tracking with two novel pattern classifiers is presented. Scale independent human detection is achieved by processing in the wavelet domain using square wavelet features. These features used to characterise human silhouettes at different scales are similar to rectangular features used in [Viola 2001]. At the detection stage two detectors are combined to improve detection rate. The first detector is based on shape-outline of humans extracted from the scene using a reduced complexity outline extraction algorithm. A Shape mismatch measure is used to differentiate between the human and the background class. The second detector uses rectangular features as primitives for silhouette description in the wavelet domain. The marginal distribution of features collocated at a particular position on a candidate human (a patch of the image) is used to describe statistically the silhouette. Two similarity measures are computed between a candidate human and the model histograms of human and non human classes. The similarity measure is used to discriminate between the human and the non human class. At the tracking stage, a tracker based on joint probabilistic data association filter (JPDAF) for data association, and motion correspondence is presented. Track clustering is used to reduce hypothesis enumeration complexity. Towards improving response time with increase in frame dimension, scene complexity, and number of channels; a scalable algorithmic architecture and operating accuracy prediction technique is presented. A scheduling strategy for improving the response time and throughput by parallel processing is also presented
Unsupervised segmentation using CNNs applied to food analysis
Treballs finals del Màster de Fonaments de Ciència de Dades, Facultat de matemàtiques, Universitat de Barcelona, Any: 2018, Tutor: Petia Radeva[en] In the recent times, there have been numerous papers on deep segmentation algorithms for vision tasks. The main challenge of these tasks is to obtain sufficient supervised pixel-level labels for the ground truth. The main goal of this project is to explore if Convolutional Neural Networks can be used for unsupervised segmentation. We follow a novel unsupervised deep architecture, capable of facing this challenge, called the W-net and we test it on food images. The main idea of this model is to concatenate two fully convolutional networks together into an autoencoder. The encoding layer produces a k-way pixelwise prediction, and both the reconstruction error of the autoencoder as well as the error from the decoder are jointly minimized
during training. We search for the best architecture for this network and we compare the results for this unsupervised network with supervised results from a well-known network
Artificial Neural Networks and Evolutionary Computation in Remote Sensing
Artificial neural networks (ANNs) and evolutionary computation methods have been successfully applied in remote sensing applications since they offer unique advantages for the analysis of remotely-sensed images. ANNs are effective in finding underlying relationships and structures within multidimensional datasets. Thanks to new sensors, we have images with more spectral bands at higher spatial resolutions, which clearly recall big data problems. For this purpose, evolutionary algorithms become the best solution for analysis. This book includes eleven high-quality papers, selected after a careful reviewing process, addressing current remote sensing problems. In the chapters of the book, superstructural optimization was suggested for the optimal design of feedforward neural networks, CNN networks were deployed for a nanosatellite payload to select images eligible for transmission to ground, a new weight feature value convolutional neural network (WFCNN) was applied for fine remote sensing image segmentation and extracting improved land-use information, mask regional-convolutional neural networks (Mask R-CNN) was employed for extracting valley fill faces, state-of-the-art convolutional neural network (CNN)-based object detection models were applied to automatically detect airplanes and ships in VHR satellite images, a coarse-to-fine detection strategy was employed to detect ships at different sizes, and a deep quadruplet network (DQN) was proposed for hyperspectral image classification
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