3,750 research outputs found
Deep Network for Simultaneous Decomposition and Classification in UWB-SAR Imagery
Classifying buried and obscured targets of interest from other natural and
manmade clutter objects in the scene is an important problem for the U.S. Army.
Targets of interest are often represented by signals captured using
low-frequency (UHF to L-band) ultra-wideband (UWB) synthetic aperture radar
(SAR) technology. This technology has been used in various applications,
including ground penetration and sensing-through-the-wall. However, the
technology still faces a significant issues regarding low-resolution SAR
imagery in this particular frequency band, low radar cross sections (RCS),
small objects compared to radar signal wavelengths, and heavy interference. The
classification problem has been firstly, and partially, addressed by sparse
representation-based classification (SRC) method which can extract noise from
signals and exploit the cross-channel information. Despite providing potential
results, SRC-related methods have drawbacks in representing nonlinear relations
and dealing with larger training sets. In this paper, we propose a Simultaneous
Decomposition and Classification Network (SDCN) to alleviate noise inferences
and enhance classification accuracy. The network contains two jointly trained
sub-networks: the decomposition sub-network handles denoising, while the
classification sub-network discriminates targets from confusers. Experimental
results show significant improvements over a network without decomposition and
SRC-related methods
A Self-Organizing System for Classifying Complex Images: Natural Textures and Synthetic Aperture Radar
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
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 Neural System for Learning to Recognize Textured Scenes
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
A deep-neural-network-based hybrid method for semi-supervised classification of polarimetric SAR data
This paper proposes a deep-neural-network-based semi-supervised method for polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (PolSAR) data classification. The proposed method focuses on achieving a well-trained deep neural network (DNN) when the amount of the labeled samples is limited. In the proposed method, the probability vectors, where each entry indicates the probability of a sample associated with a category, are first evaluated for the unlabeled samples, leading to an augmented training set. With this augmented training set, the parameters in the DNN are learned by solving the optimization problem, where the log-likelihood cost function and the class probability vectors are used. To alleviate the “salt-and-pepper” appearance in the classification results of PolSAR images, the spatial interdependencies are incorporated by introducing a Markov random field (MRF) prior in the prediction step. The experimental results on two realistic PolSAR images demonstrate that the proposed method effectively incorporates the spatial interdependencies and achieves the good classification accuracy with a limited number of labeled samples
Neural Architectural Nonlinear Pre-Processing for mmWave Radar-based Human Gesture Perception
In modern on-driving computing environments, many sensors are used for
context-aware applications. This paper utilizes two deep learning models, U-Net
and EfficientNet, which consist of a convolutional neural network (CNN), to
detect hand gestures and remove noise in the Range Doppler Map image that was
measured through a millimeter-wave (mmWave) radar. To improve the performance
of classification, accurate pre-processing algorithms are essential. Therefore,
a novel pre-processing approach to denoise images before entering the first
deep learning model stage increases the accuracy of classification. Thus, this
paper proposes a deep neural network based high-performance nonlinear
pre-processing method.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figure
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