9 research outputs found

    Very High Resolution (VHR) Satellite Imagery: Processing and Applications

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    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

    Road Information Extraction from Mobile LiDAR Point Clouds using Deep Neural Networks

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    Urban roads, as one of the essential transportation infrastructures, provide considerable motivations for rapid urban sprawl and bring notable economic and social benefits. Accurate and efficient extraction of road information plays a significant role in the development of autonomous vehicles (AVs) and high-definition (HD) maps. Mobile laser scanning (MLS) systems have been widely used for many transportation-related studies and applications in road inventory, including road object detection, pavement inspection, road marking segmentation and classification, and road boundary extraction, benefiting from their large-scale data coverage, high surveying flexibility, high measurement accuracy, and reduced weather sensitivity. Road information from MLS point clouds is significant for road infrastructure planning and maintenance, and have an important impact on transportation-related policymaking, driving behaviour regulation, and traffic efficiency enhancement. Compared to the existing threshold-based and rule-based road information extraction methods, deep learning methods have demonstrated superior performance in 3D road object segmentation and classification tasks. However, three main challenges remain that impede deep learning methods for precisely and robustly extracting road information from MLS point clouds. (1) Point clouds obtained from MLS systems are always in large-volume and irregular formats, which has presented significant challenges for managing and processing such massive unstructured points. (2) Variations in point density and intensity are inevitable because of the profiling scanning mechanism of MLS systems. (3) Due to occlusions and the limited scanning range of onboard sensors, some road objects are incomplete, which considerably degrades the performance of threshold-based methods to extract road information. To deal with these challenges, this doctoral thesis proposes several deep neural networks that encode inherent point cloud features and extract road information. These novel deep learning models have been tested by several datasets to deliver robust and accurate road information extraction results compared to state-of-the-art deep learning methods in complex urban environments. First, an end-to-end feature extraction framework for 3D point cloud segmentation is proposed using dynamic point-wise convolutional operations at multiple scales. This framework is less sensitive to data distribution and computational power. Second, a capsule-based deep learning framework to extract and classify road markings is developed to update road information and support HD maps. It demonstrates the practical application of combining capsule networks with hierarchical feature encodings of georeferenced feature images. Third, a novel deep learning framework for road boundary completion is developed using MLS point clouds and satellite imagery, based on the U-shaped network and the conditional deep convolutional generative adversarial network (c-DCGAN). Empirical evidence obtained from experiments compared with state-of-the-art methods demonstrates the superior performance of the proposed models in road object semantic segmentation, road marking extraction and classification, and road boundary completion tasks

    Deep Learning Methods for Remote Sensing

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    Remote sensing is a field where important physical characteristics of an area are exacted using emitted radiation generally captured by satellite cameras, sensors onboard aerial vehicles, etc. Captured data help researchers develop solutions to sense and detect various characteristics such as forest fires, flooding, changes in urban areas, crop diseases, soil moisture, etc. The recent impressive progress in artificial intelligence (AI) and deep learning has sparked innovations in technologies, algorithms, and approaches and led to results that were unachievable until recently in multiple areas, among them remote sensing. This book consists of sixteen peer-reviewed papers covering new advances in the use of AI for remote sensing

    Towards the early detection of melanoma by automating the measurement of asymmetry, border irregularity, color variegation, and diameter in dermoscopy images

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    The incidence of melanoma, the most aggressive form of skin cancer, has increased more than many other cancers in recent years. The aim of this thesis is to develop objective measures and automated methods to evaluate the ABCD (Asymmetry, Border irregularity, Color variegation, and Diameter) rule features in dermoscopy images, a popular method that provides a simple means for appraisal of pigmented lesions that might require further investigation by a specialist. However, research gaps in evaluating those features have been encountered in literature. To extract skin lesions, two segmentation approaches that are robust to inherent dermoscopic image problems have been proposed, and showed to outperform other approaches used in literature. Measures for finding asymmetry and border irregularity have been developed. The asymmetry measure describes invariant features, provides a compactness representation of the image, and captures discriminative properties of skin lesions. The border irregularity measure, which is preceded by a border detection step carried out by a novel edge detection algorithm that represents the image in terms of fuzzy concepts, is rotation invariant, characterizes the complexity of the shape associated with the border, and robust to noise. To automate the measures, classification methods that are based on ensemble learning and which take the ambiguity of data into consideration have been proposed. Color variegation was evaluated by determining the suspicious colors of melanoma from a generated color palette for the image, and the diameter of the skin lesion was measured using a shape descriptor that was eventually represented in millimeters. The work developed in the thesis reflects the automatic dermoscopic image analysis standard pipeline, and a computer-aided diagnosis system (CAD) for the automatic detection and objective evaluation of the ABCD rule features. It can be used as an objective bedside tool serving as a diagnostic adjunct in the clinical assessment of skin lesions

    Image and Video Forensics

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    Nowadays, images and videos have become the main modalities of information being exchanged in everyday life, and their pervasiveness has led the image forensics community to question their reliability, integrity, confidentiality, and security. Multimedia contents are generated in many different ways through the use of consumer electronics and high-quality digital imaging devices, such as smartphones, digital cameras, tablets, and wearable and IoT devices. The ever-increasing convenience of image acquisition has facilitated instant distribution and sharing of digital images on digital social platforms, determining a great amount of exchange data. Moreover, the pervasiveness of powerful image editing tools has allowed the manipulation of digital images for malicious or criminal ends, up to the creation of synthesized images and videos with the use of deep learning techniques. In response to these threats, the multimedia forensics community has produced major research efforts regarding the identification of the source and the detection of manipulation. In all cases (e.g., forensic investigations, fake news debunking, information warfare, and cyberattacks) where images and videos serve as critical evidence, forensic technologies that help to determine the origin, authenticity, and integrity of multimedia content can become essential tools. This book aims to collect a diverse and complementary set of articles that demonstrate new developments and applications in image and video forensics to tackle new and serious challenges to ensure media authenticity

    Applied Metaheuristic Computing

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    For decades, Applied Metaheuristic Computing (AMC) has been a prevailing optimization technique for tackling perplexing engineering and business problems, such as scheduling, routing, ordering, bin packing, assignment, facility layout planning, among others. This is partly because the classic exact methods are constrained with prior assumptions, and partly due to the heuristics being problem-dependent and lacking generalization. AMC, on the contrary, guides the course of low-level heuristics to search beyond the local optimality, which impairs the capability of traditional computation methods. This topic series has collected quality papers proposing cutting-edge methodology and innovative applications which drive the advances of AMC

    Applied Methuerstic computing

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    For decades, Applied Metaheuristic Computing (AMC) has been a prevailing optimization technique for tackling perplexing engineering and business problems, such as scheduling, routing, ordering, bin packing, assignment, facility layout planning, among others. This is partly because the classic exact methods are constrained with prior assumptions, and partly due to the heuristics being problem-dependent and lacking generalization. AMC, on the contrary, guides the course of low-level heuristics to search beyond the local optimality, which impairs the capability of traditional computation methods. This topic series has collected quality papers proposing cutting-edge methodology and innovative applications which drive the advances of AMC

    Safety and Reliability - Safe Societies in a Changing World

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    The contributions cover a wide range of methodologies and application areas for safety and reliability that contribute to safe societies in a changing world. These methodologies and applications include: - foundations of risk and reliability assessment and management - mathematical methods in reliability and safety - risk assessment - risk management - system reliability - uncertainty analysis - digitalization and big data - prognostics and system health management - occupational safety - accident and incident modeling - maintenance modeling and applications - simulation for safety and reliability analysis - dynamic risk and barrier management - organizational factors and safety culture - human factors and human reliability - resilience engineering - structural reliability - natural hazards - security - economic analysis in risk managemen
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