4,680 research outputs found
Deep learning in remote sensing: a review
Standing at the paradigm shift towards data-intensive science, machine
learning techniques are becoming increasingly important. In particular, as a
major breakthrough in the field, deep learning has proven as an extremely
powerful tool in many fields. Shall we embrace deep learning as the key to all?
Or, should we resist a 'black-box' solution? There are controversial opinions
in the remote sensing community. In this article, we analyze the challenges of
using deep learning for remote sensing data analysis, review the recent
advances, and provide resources to make deep learning in remote sensing
ridiculously simple to start with. More importantly, we advocate remote sensing
scientists to bring their expertise into deep learning, and use it as an
implicit general model to tackle unprecedented large-scale influential
challenges, such as climate change and urbanization.Comment: Accepted for publication IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Magazin
Ship Wake Detection in SAR Images via Sparse Regularization
In order to analyse synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images of the sea surface,
ship wake detection is essential for extracting information on the wake
generating vessels. One possibility is to assume a linear model for wakes, in
which case detection approaches are based on transforms such as Radon and
Hough. These express the bright (dark) lines as peak (trough) points in the
transform domain. In this paper, ship wake detection is posed as an inverse
problem, which the associated cost function including a sparsity enforcing
penalty, i.e. the generalized minimax concave (GMC) function. Despite being a
non-convex regularizer, the GMC penalty enforces the overall cost function to
be convex. The proposed solution is based on a Bayesian formulation, whereby
the point estimates are recovered using maximum a posteriori (MAP) estimation.
To quantify the performance of the proposed method, various types of SAR images
are used, corresponding to TerraSAR-X, COSMO-SkyMed, Sentinel-1, and ALOS2. The
performance of various priors in solving the proposed inverse problem is first
studied by investigating the GMC along with the L1, Lp, nuclear and total
variation (TV) norms. We show that the GMC achieves the best results and we
subsequently study the merits of the corresponding method in comparison to two
state-of-the-art approaches for ship wake detection. The results show that our
proposed technique offers the best performance by achieving 80% success rate.Comment: 18 page
Blur resolved OCT: full-range interferometric synthetic aperture microscopy through dispersion encoding
We present a computational method for full-range interferometric synthetic
aperture microscopy (ISAM) under dispersion encoding. With this, one can
effectively double the depth range of optical coherence tomography (OCT),
whilst dramatically enhancing the spatial resolution away from the focal plane.
To this end, we propose a model-based iterative reconstruction (MBIR) method,
where ISAM is directly considered in an optimization approach, and we make the
discovery that sparsity promoting regularization effectively recovers the
full-range signal. Within this work, we adopt an optimal nonuniform discrete
fast Fourier transform (NUFFT) implementation of ISAM, which is both fast and
numerically stable throughout iterations. We validate our method with several
complex samples, scanned with a commercial SD-OCT system with no hardware
modification. With this, we both demonstrate full-range ISAM imaging, and
significantly outperform combinations of existing methods.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures. The images have been compressed for arxiv -
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