214,761 research outputs found
Programmable Spectrometry -- Per-pixel Classification of Materials using Learned Spectral Filters
Many materials have distinct spectral profiles. This facilitates estimation
of the material composition of a scene at each pixel by first acquiring its
hyperspectral image, and subsequently filtering it using a bank of spectral
profiles. This process is inherently wasteful since only a set of linear
projections of the acquired measurements contribute to the classification task.
We propose a novel programmable camera that is capable of producing images of a
scene with an arbitrary spectral filter. We use this camera to optically
implement the spectral filtering of the scene's hyperspectral image with the
bank of spectral profiles needed to perform per-pixel material classification.
This provides gains both in terms of acquisition speed --- since only the
relevant measurements are acquired --- and in signal-to-noise ratio --- since
we invariably avoid narrowband filters that are light inefficient. Given
training data, we use a range of classical and modern techniques including SVMs
and neural networks to identify the bank of spectral profiles that facilitate
material classification. We verify the method in simulations on standard
datasets as well as real data using a lab prototype of the camera
A spatially distributed model for foreground segmentation
Foreground segmentation is a fundamental first processing stage for vision systems which monitor real-world activity. In this paper we consider the problem of achieving robust segmentation in scenes where the appearance of the background varies unpredictably over time. Variations may be caused by processes such as moving water, or foliage moved by wind, and typically degrade the performance of standard per-pixel background models.
Our proposed approach addresses this problem by modeling homogeneous regions of scene pixels as an adaptive mixture of Gaussians in color and space. Model components are used to represent both the scene background and moving foreground objects. Newly observed pixel values are probabilistically classified, such that the spatial variance of the model components supports correct classification even when the background appearance is significantly distorted. We evaluate our method over several challenging video sequences, and compare our results with both per-pixel and Markov Random Field based models. Our results show the effectiveness of our approach in reducing incorrect classifications
Sub-Pixel Classification of Forest Cover Types in East Texas
Sub-pixel classification is the extraction of information about the proportion of individual materials of interest within a pixel. Landcover classification at the sub-pixel scale provides more discrimination than traditional per-pixel multispectral classifiers for pixels where the material of interest is mixed with other materials. It allows for the un-mixing of pixels to show the proportion of each material of interest. The materials of interest for this study are pine, hardwood, mixed forest and non-forest. The goal of this project was to perform a sub-pixel classification, which allows a pixel to have multiple labels, and compare the result to a traditional supervised classification, which allows a pixel to have only one label. The satellite image used was a Landsat 5 Thematic Mapper (TM) scene of the Stephen F. Austin Experimental Forest in Nacogdoches County, Texas and the four cover type classes are pine, hardwood, mixed forest and non-forest. Once classified, a multi-layer raster datasets was created that comprised four raster layers where each layer showed the percentage of that cover type within the pixel area. Percentage cover type maps were then produced and the accuracy of each was assessed using a fuzzy error matrix for the sub-pixel classifications, and the results were compared to the supervised classification in which a traditional error matrix was used. The overall accuracy of the sub-pixel classification using the aerial photo for both training and reference data had the highest (65% overall) out of the three sub-pixel classifications. This was understandable because the analyst can visually observe the cover types actually on the ground for training data and reference data, whereas using the FIA (Forest Inventory and Analysis) plot data, the analyst must assume that an entire pixel contains the exact percentage of a cover type found in a plot. When compared to the supervised classification which has a satisfactory overall accuracy of 90%, non of the sub-pixel classification achieved the same level. However, since traditional per-pixel classifiers assign only one label to pixels throughout the landscape while sub-pixel classifications assign multiple labels to each pixel, the traditional 85% accuracy of acceptance for pixel-based classifications should not apply to sub-pixel classifications. More research is needed in order to define the level of accuracy that is deem acceptable for sub-pixel classifications
Development of fuzzy rule-based parameters for urban object-oriented classification using very high resolution imagery
Urban areas consist of spectrally and spatially heterogeneous features. Advanced information extraction techniques are needed to handle high resolution imageries in providing detailed information for urban planning applications. This study was conducted to identify a technique that accurately maps impervious and pervious surfaces from WorldView-2 (WV-2) imagery. Supervised per-pixel classification algorithms including Maximum Likelihood and Support Vector Machine (SVM) were utilized to evaluate the capability of spectral-based classifiers to classify urban features. Object-oriented classification was performed using supervised SVM and fuzzy rule-based approach to add spatial and texture attributes to spectral information. Supervised object-oriented SVM achieved 82.80% overall accuracy which was the better accuracy compared to supervised per-pixel classifiers. Classification based on the proposed fuzzy rule-based system revealed satisfactory output compared to other classification techniques with an overall accuracy of 87.10% for pervious surfaces and an overall accuracy of 85.19% for impervious surfaces
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