1,121 research outputs found

    Statistical Classification for Heterogeneous Polarimetric SAR Images

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    International audienceThis paper presents a general approach for high-resolution polarimetric SAR data classification in heterogeneous clutter, based on a statistical test of equality of covariance matrices. The Spherically Invariant Random Vector (SIRV) model is used to describe the clutter. Several distance measures, including classical ones used in standard classification methods, can be derived from the general test. The new approach provide a threshold over which pixels are rejected from the image, meaning they are not sufficiently "close" from any existing class. A distance measure using this general approach is derived and tested on a high-resolution polarimetric data set acquired by the ONERA RAMSES system. It is compared to the results of the classical decomposition and Wishart classifier under Gaussian and SIRV assumption. Results show that the new approach rejects all pixels from heterogeneous parts of the scene and classifies its Gaussian parts

    CFAR Hierarchical Clustering of Polarimetric SAR Data

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    International audienceRecently, a general approach for high-resolution polarimetric SAR (POLSAR) data classification in heterogeneous clutter was presented, based on a statistical test of equality of covariance matrices. Here, we extend that approach by taking advantage of the Constant False Alarm Ratio (CFAR) property of the statistical test in order to improve the clustering process. We show that the CFAR property can be used in the hierarchical segmentation of the POLSAR data images to automatically detect the number of clusters. The proposed method will be applied on a high-resolution polarimetric data set acquired by the ONERA RAMSES system

    Analytic Expressions for Stochastic Distances Between Relaxed Complex Wishart Distributions

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    The scaled complex Wishart distribution is a widely used model for multilook full polarimetric SAR data whose adequacy has been attested in the literature. Classification, segmentation, and image analysis techniques which depend on this model have been devised, and many of them employ some type of dissimilarity measure. In this paper we derive analytic expressions for four stochastic distances between relaxed scaled complex Wishart distributions in their most general form and in important particular cases. Using these distances, inequalities are obtained which lead to new ways of deriving the Bartlett and revised Wishart distances. The expressiveness of the four analytic distances is assessed with respect to the variation of parameters. Such distances are then used for deriving new tests statistics, which are proved to have asymptotic chi-square distribution. Adopting the test size as a comparison criterion, a sensitivity study is performed by means of Monte Carlo experiments suggesting that the Bhattacharyya statistic outperforms all the others. The power of the tests is also assessed. Applications to actual data illustrate the discrimination and homogeneity identification capabilities of these distances.Comment: Accepted for publication in the IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing journa

    On the use of the l(2)-norm for texture analysis of polarimetric SAR data

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    In this paper, the use of the l2-norm, or Span, of the scattering vectors is suggested for texture analysis of polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data, with the benefits that we need neither an analysis of the polarimetric channels separately nor a filtering of the data to analyze the statistics. Based on the product model, the distribution of the l2-norm is studied. Closed expressions of the probability density functions under the assumptions of several texture distributions are provided. To utilize the statistical properties of the l2-norm, quantities including normalized moments and log-cumulants are derived, along with corresponding estimators and estimation variances. Results on both simulated and real SAR data show that the use of statistics based on the l2-norm brings advantages in several aspects with respect to the normalized intensity moments and matrix variate log-cumulants.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    A Non-Parametric Texture Descriptor for Polarimetric SAR Data with Applications to Supervised Classification

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    The paper describes a novel representation of polarimetric SAR (PolSAR) data that is inherently non-parametric and therefore particularly suited for characterising data in which the commonly adopted hypothesis of Gaussian backscatter is not appropriate. The descriptor is also non-local and can capture image structure in terms of the arrangement of edge-, ridge- and point-like features, to yield a salient characerisation of semi-periodic spatial patterns. The basic approach is based closely on [1] and has been adapted for application to PolSAR data. As an example application, the descriptor is evaluated in the context of supervised classification. The performance is compared with conventional statistical approaches on both simulated and real PolSAR dat
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