Paper
13 April 2009 Information abstraction for enhanced image fusion based surveillance systems
Scott F. Page, Moira I. Smith, Duncan Hickman, Paul K. Kimber
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The benefits of image fusion for man-in-the-loop Detection, Recognition, and Identification (DRI) tasks are well known. However, the performance of conventional image fusion systems is typically sub-optimal, as they fail to capitalise on high-level information which can be abstracted from the imagery. As part of a larger study into an Intelligent Image Fusion (I2F) framework, this paper presents a novel approach which exploits high-level cues to adaptively enhance the fused image via feedback to the pixel-level processing. Two scenarios are chosen for illustrative application of the approach, Situational Awareness and Anomalous Object Detection (AOD). In the Situational Awareness scenario, motion and other cues are used to enhance areas of the image according to predefined tasks, such as the detection of moving targets of a certain size. This yields a large increase in Local Signal-to-Clutter Ratio (LSCR) when compared to a baseline, non-adaptive approach. In the AOD scenario, spatial and spectral information is used to direct a foveal-patch image fusion algorithm. This demonstrates a significant increase in the Probability of Detection on test imagery whilst simultaneously reducing the mean number of false alarms when compared to a baseline, non-foveal approach. This paper presents the rationale for the I2F approach and details two specific examples of how it can be applied to address very different applications. Design details and quantitative performance analysis results are reported.
© (2009) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Scott F. Page, Moira I. Smith, Duncan Hickman, and Paul K. Kimber "Information abstraction for enhanced image fusion based surveillance systems", Proc. SPIE 7345, Multisensor, Multisource Information Fusion: Architectures, Algorithms, and Applications 2009, 73450K (13 April 2009); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.818460
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CITATIONS
Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Image fusion

Image processing

Image enhancement

Situational awareness sensors

Detection and tracking algorithms

Target detection

Motion detection

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