We report a trial wherein a simple 4 CCD visible-band Polarimetric Imaging (PI) camera was fielded against aircraft debris distributed across an arid terrain, a littoral region and a small number of maritime debris targets A debris field realistically simulating an aircrash and a debris grid of aircraft remains were observed from an air platform flying in dry and sunny conditions. We report PI utility in support of air accident investigation by an enhanced ability to successfully locate small targets within the scene via the use of colour enhanced and decorrelated intensity PI products. Our results indicate that handheld PI capability may represent an effective low cost, upgrade and augmentation option for existing and future imaging systems that would support air accident investigators and assist in the cueing of more sophisticated assets and/or analyst attention.
The next generation of military reconnaissance systems will generate larger images, with more bits per pixel, combined with improved spatial, spectral and temporal resolutions. This increase in the quantity of imagery requiring analysis to produce militarily useful reports, the "data deluge", will place a significant burden upon dissemination systems and upon traditional, largely manual, exploitation techniques. To avoid the possibility that imagery derived from expensive assets may go unexploited, an increased use of automated imagery exploitation tools is required to assist the Image Analysts (IAs) in their tasks.
This paper describes the fully automated generation of time sequence datacubes from mixed imagery sources as cueing aids for IAs. In addition to facilitating quick and easy visual inspection, the datacubes provide the prealigned image sets needed for exploitation by some automated change detection and target detection algorithms. The ARACHNID system under development handles SAR, IR and EO imagery and will align image pairs obtained with widely differing sun, view and zenith angles. Edge enhancement pre-processing is employed to increase the similarity between images of disparate characteristics.
Progress is reported on the automation of this registration task, on its current performance characteristics, its potential for integration into an operational system, and on its expected utility in this context.
Increasingly demanding military requirements and rapid technological advances are producing reconnaissance sensors with greater spatial, spectral and temporal resolution. This, with the benefits to be gained from deploying multiple sensors co-operatively, is resulting in a so-called data deluge, where recording systems, data-links, and exploitation systems struggle to cope with the required imagery throughput. This paper focuses on the exploitation stage and, in particular, the provision of cueing aids for Imagery Analysts (IAs), who need to integrate a variety of sources in order to gain situational awareness. These sources may include multi-source imagery and intelligence feeds, various types of mapping and collateral data, as well the need for the IAs to add their own expertise in military doctrine etc. This integration task is becoming increasingly difficult as the volume and diversity of the input increases. The first stage in many exploitation tasks is that of image registration. It facilitates change detection and many avenues of multi-source exploitation. Progress is reported on the automating this task, on its current performance characteristics, its integration into a potentially operational system, and hence on its expected utility. We also report on the development of an evolutionary architecture, 'ICARUS' in which feature detectors (or cuers) are constructed incrementally using a genetic algorithm that evolves simple sub-structures before combining, and further evolving them, to form more comprehensive and robust detectors. This approach is shown to help overcome the complexity limit that prevents many machine-learning algorithms from scaling up to the real world.
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