2,228 research outputs found
Image fusion techniqes for remote sensing applications
Image fusion refers to the acquisition, processing and synergistic combination of information provided by various sensors or by the same sensor in many measuring contexts. The aim of this survey paper is to describe three typical applications of data fusion in remote sensing. The first study case considers the problem of the Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) Interferometry, where a pair of antennas are used to obtain an elevation map of the observed scene; the second one refers to the fusion of multisensor and multitemporal (Landsat Thematic Mapper and SAR) images of the same site acquired at different times, by using neural networks; the third one presents a processor to fuse multifrequency, multipolarization and mutiresolution SAR images, based on wavelet transform and multiscale Kalman filter. Each study case presents also results achieved by the proposed techniques applied to real data
Resolving Structure in Human Brain Organization: Identifying Mesoscale Organization in Weighted Network Representations
Human brain anatomy and function display a combination of modular and
hierarchical organization, suggesting the importance of both cohesive
structures and variable resolutions in the facilitation of healthy cognitive
processes. However, tools to simultaneously probe these features of brain
architecture require further development. We propose and apply a set of methods
to extract cohesive structures in network representations of brain connectivity
using multi-resolution techniques. We employ a combination of soft
thresholding, windowed thresholding, and resolution in community detection,
that enable us to identify and isolate structures associated with different
weights. One such mesoscale structure is bipartivity, which quantifies the
extent to which the brain is divided into two partitions with high connectivity
between partitions and low connectivity within partitions. A second,
complementary mesoscale structure is modularity, which quantifies the extent to
which the brain is divided into multiple communities with strong connectivity
within each community and weak connectivity between communities. Our methods
lead to multi-resolution curves of these network diagnostics over a range of
spatial, geometric, and structural scales. For statistical comparison, we
contrast our results with those obtained for several benchmark null models. Our
work demonstrates that multi-resolution diagnostic curves capture complex
organizational profiles in weighted graphs. We apply these methods to the
identification of resolution-specific characteristics of healthy weighted graph
architecture and altered connectivity profiles in psychiatric disease.Comment: Comments welcom
Synthesis of Multiresolution Scenes with Global Illumination on a GPU
[Abstract] The radiosity computation has the important feature of producing view independent results, but these results are mesh dependent and, in consequence, are attached to a specific level of detail in the input mesh. Therefore, rendering at iterative frame rates would benefit from the utilization of multiresolution models. In this paper we focus on the rendering stage of a solution for hierarchical radiosity for multiresolution systems. This method is based on the application of an enriched hierarchical radiosity algorithm to an input scene with low resolution objects (represented by coarse meshes), and the efficient data management of the resulting values. The proposed encoding makes it possible to apply the color values obtained for the coarse objects to detailed versions of these objects during the rendering phase. These finer meshes are obtained by a standard mesh subdivision strategy, such as the Loop subdivision scheme. Our solution performs the whole rendering stage of this multiresolution approach on the GPU, implementing it in the geometry shader using Microsoft HLSL. Results of our implementation show an important reduction in computational costs
Accurate and reliable segmentation of the optic disc in digital fundus images
We describe a complete pipeline for the detection and accurate automatic segmentation of the optic disc in digital fundus images. This procedure provides separation of vascular information and accurate inpainting of vessel-removed images, symmetry-based optic disc localization, and fitting of incrementally complex contour models at increasing resolutions using information related to inpainted images and vessel masks. Validation experiments, performed on a large dataset of images of healthy and pathological eyes, annotated by experts and partially graded with a quality label, demonstrate the good performances of the proposed approach. The method is able to detect the optic disc and trace its contours better than the other systems presented in the literature and tested on the same data. The average error in the obtained contour masks is reasonably close to the interoperator errors and suitable for practical applications. The optic disc segmentation pipeline is currently integrated in a complete software suite for the semiautomatic quantification of retinal vessel properties from fundus camera images (VAMPIRE)
Vision-Based Road Detection in Automotive Systems: A Real-Time Expectation-Driven Approach
The main aim of this work is the development of a vision-based road detection
system fast enough to cope with the difficult real-time constraints imposed by
moving vehicle applications. The hardware platform, a special-purpose massively
parallel system, has been chosen to minimize system production and operational
costs. This paper presents a novel approach to expectation-driven low-level
image segmentation, which can be mapped naturally onto mesh-connected massively
parallel SIMD architectures capable of handling hierarchical data structures.
The input image is assumed to contain a distorted version of a given template;
a multiresolution stretching process is used to reshape the original template
in accordance with the acquired image content, minimizing a potential function.
The distorted template is the process output.Comment: See http://www.jair.org/ for any accompanying file
Combining local regularity estimation and total variation optimization for scale-free texture segmentation
Texture segmentation constitutes a standard image processing task, crucial to
many applications. The present contribution focuses on the particular subset of
scale-free textures and its originality resides in the combination of three key
ingredients: First, texture characterization relies on the concept of local
regularity ; Second, estimation of local regularity is based on new multiscale
quantities referred to as wavelet leaders ; Third, segmentation from local
regularity faces a fundamental bias variance trade-off: In nature, local
regularity estimation shows high variability that impairs the detection of
changes, while a posteriori smoothing of regularity estimates precludes from
locating correctly changes. Instead, the present contribution proposes several
variational problem formulations based on total variation and proximal
resolutions that effectively circumvent this trade-off. Estimation and
segmentation performance for the proposed procedures are quantified and
compared on synthetic as well as on real-world textures
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