scholarly journals How Can Despeckling and Structural Features Benefit to Change Detection on Bitemporal SAR Images?

2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 421 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rongfang Wang ◽  
Jia-Wei Chen ◽  
Licheng Jiao ◽  
Mi Wang

Change detection on bitemporal synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images is a key branch of SAR image interpretation. However, it is challenging due to speckle and unavoidable registration errors within bitemporal SAR images. A key issue is whether and how despeckling and structural features can improve accuracy. In this paper, we investigate how despeckling and structural features can benefit change detection for SAR images. Several change detection methods were performed on both input images and the corresponding despeckled images, where despeckling was achieved by different methods. The comparisons demonstrate that despeckling methods that preserve the structures can suppress noise in difference images and can improve the accuracy of change detection. We also developed a sparse model to exploit structural features from the difference images while reducing the influence of misalignment between bitemporal SAR images. The comparisons were performed on five datasets of bitemporal SAR images, and the experimental results show that our proposed sparse model outperforms other traditional methods, demonstrating the advantages of change detection.

2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenping Ma ◽  
Hui Yang ◽  
Yue Wu ◽  
Yunta Xiong ◽  
Tao Hu ◽  
...  

In this paper, a novel change detection approach based on multi-grained cascade forest(gcForest) and multi-scale fusion for synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images is proposed. It detectsthe changed and unchanged areas of the images by using the well-trained gcForest. Most existingchange detection methods need to select the appropriate size of the image block. However, thesingle size image block only provides a part of the local information, and gcForest cannot achieve agood effect on the image representation learning ability. Therefore, the proposed approach choosesdifferent sizes of image blocks as the input of gcForest, which can learn more image characteristicsand reduce the influence of the local information of the image on the classification result as well.In addition, in order to improve the detection accuracy of those pixels whose gray value changesabruptly, the proposed approach combines gradient information of the difference image with theprobability map obtained from the well-trained gcForest. Therefore, the image edge information canbe enhanced and the accuracy of edge detection can be improved by extracting the image gradientinformation. Experiments on four data sets indicate that the proposed approach outperforms otherstate-of-the-art algorithms.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (18) ◽  
pp. 3697
Author(s):  
Liangliang Li ◽  
Hongbing Ma ◽  
Zhenhong Jia

Change detection is an important task in identifying land cover change in different periods. In synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images, the inherent speckle noise leads to false changed points, and this affects the performance of change detection. To improve the accuracy of change detection, a novel automatic SAR image change detection algorithm based on saliency detection and convolutional-wavelet neural networks is proposed. The log-ratio operator is adopted to generate the difference image, and the speckle reducing anisotropic diffusion is used to enhance the original multitemporal SAR images and the difference image. To reduce the influence of speckle noise, the salient area that probably belongs to the changed object is obtained from the difference image. The saliency analysis step can remove small noise regions by thresholding the saliency map, and interest regions can be preserved. Then an enhanced difference image is generated by combing the binarized saliency map and two input images. A hierarchical fuzzy c-means model is applied to the enhanced difference image to classify pixels into the changed, unchanged, and intermediate regions. The convolutional-wavelet neural networks are used to generate the final change map. Experimental results on five SAR data sets indicated the proposed approach provided good performance in change detection compared to state-of-the-art relative techniques, and the values of the metrics computed by the proposed method caused significant improvement.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 526 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nengyuan Liu ◽  
Zongjie Cao ◽  
Zongyong Cui ◽  
Yiming Pi ◽  
Sihang Dang

The classic ship detection methods in synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images suffer from an extreme variance of ship scale. Generating a set of ship proposals before detection operation can effectively alleviate the multi-scale problem. In order to construct a scale-independent proposal generator for SAR images, we suggest four characteristics of ships in SAR images and the corresponding four procedures in this paper. Based on these characteristics and procedures, we put forward a framework to explore multi-scale ship proposals. The designed framework mainly contains two stages: hierarchical grouping and proposal scoring. Firstly, we extract edges, superpixels and strong scattering components from SAR images. The ship proposals are obtained at hierarchical grouping stage by combining the strong scattering components with superpixel grouping. Considering the difference of edge density and the completeness and tightness of contour, we obtain the scores to measure the confidence that a proposal contains a ship. Finally, the ranking proposals are obtained. Extensive experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of the four procedures. Our method achieves 0.70 the average best overlap (ABO) score, 0.59 the area under the curve (AUC) score and 0.85 best recall on a challenging dataset. In addition, the recall of our method on three scale subsets are all above 0.80. Experimental results demonstrate that our algorithm outperforms the approaches previously used for SAR images.


2021 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 209-224
Author(s):  
Yeva Maksimovna Yeshilbashian ◽  
Ariana Armenovna Asatryan ◽  
Tsolak Gukasovitch Ghukasyan

In this work we study the application of intrinsic stylometric methods to the task of plagiarism detection in Armenian texts. We use two task setups from PAN’s series of conferences on text forensics and stylometry: style change detection and style breach detection. Style change detection aims to determine whether the text is written by more than one author, while style breach detection detects the boundaries of stylistically distinct text fragments. For these tasks, we generate synthetic test sets for three genres of text: academic, literature, and news, and then use them to evaluate the effectiveness of hierarchical clustering and other relevant models from PAN conferences. We employ a standard set of character-level, lexical and readability features, and additionally perform morphological and dependency parsing of text fragments to extract syntactic features encoding author style information. The evaluation results show that the clustering-based approach fails to correctly detect style change detection in longer texts and is only marginally better for shorter texts. For style breach detection, hierarchical clustering-based approach performs better than a random baseline classifier, but the difference is not sufficient to warrant its practical use. In a complementary experiment, we show that reducing the number of features and multicollinearity in them via PCA helps to increase the precision of style breach detection methods for certain text categories.


Author(s):  
W. Liu ◽  
J. Yang ◽  
J. Zhao ◽  
H. Shi ◽  
L. Yang

Most of the existing change detection methods using full polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (PolSAR) are limited to detecting change between two points in time. In this paper, a novel method was proposed to detect the change based on time-series data from different sensors. Firstly, the overall difference image of a time-series PolSAR was calculated by ominous statistic test. Secondly, difference images between any two images in different times ware acquired by R<sub>j</sub> statistic test. Generalized Gaussian mixture model (GGMM) was used to obtain time-series change detection maps in the last step for the proposed method. To verify the effectiveness of the proposed method, we carried out the experiment of change detection by using the time-series PolSAR images acquired by Radarsat-2 and Gaofen-3 over the city of Wuhan, in China. Results show that the proposed method can detect the time-series change from different sensors.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Huang ◽  
Yuanmin Fang ◽  
Xiaoqing Zuo ◽  
Xueqin Yu

This paper presents a new automatic change detection method of multitemporal remote sensing images based on 2D-Otsu algorithm improved by Firefly algorithm. The proposed method is designed to automatically extract the changing area between two temporal remote sensing images. First, two different temporal remote sensing images were acquired through difference value method of remote sensing images; then, the 2D-Otsu threshold segmentation principles are analyzed and the optimal threshold of 2D-Otsu threshold segmentation method is figured out by using the Firefly algorithm, where the difference images are conducted with binary classification to obtain the changing category and the nonchanging category; finally, the proposed method is used to carry out change detection experiments on the two selected areas, where a variety of methods are compared. Experimental results show that the proposed method can effectively and quickly extract the changing area between the two temporal remote sensing images; thus, it is an effective method of change detection for remote sensing images.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 1619 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jia-Wei Chen ◽  
Rongfang Wang ◽  
Fan Ding ◽  
Bo Liu ◽  
Licheng Jiao ◽  
...  

In synthetic aperture radar (SAR) image change detection, it is quite challenging to exploit the changing information from the noisy difference image subject to the speckle. In this paper, we propose a multi-scale spatial pooling (MSSP) network to exploit the changed information from the noisy difference image. Being different from the traditional convolutional network with only mono-scale pooling kernels, in the proposed method, multi-scale pooling kernels are equipped in a convolutional network to exploit the spatial context information on changed regions from the difference image. Furthermore, to verify the generalization of the proposed method, we apply our proposed method to the cross-dataset bitemporal SAR image change detection, where the MSSP network (MSSP-Net) is trained on a dataset and then applied to an unknown testing dataset. We compare the proposed method with other state-of-arts and the comparisons are performed on four challenging datasets of bitemporal SAR images. Experimental results demonstrate that our proposed method obtain comparable results with S-PCA-Net on YR-A and YR-B dataset and outperforms other state-of-art methods, especially on the Sendai-A and Sendai-B datasets with more complex scenes. More important, MSSP-Net is more efficient than S-PCA-Net and convolutional neural networks (CNN) with less executing time in both training and testing phases.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 678
Author(s):  
Xuzhe Lyu ◽  
Ming Hao ◽  
Wenzhong Shi

In this paper, a novel building change detection approach is proposed using statistical region merging (SRM) and a shape context similarity model for Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) data. First, digital surface models (DSMs) are generated from LiDAR acquired at two different epochs, and the difference data D-DSM is created by difference processing. Second, to reduce the noise and registration error of the pixel-based method, the SRM algorithm is applied to segment the D-DSM, and multi-scale segmentation results are obtained under different scale values. Then, the shape context similarity model is used to calculate the shape similarity between the segmented objects and the buildings. Finally, the refined building change map is produced by the k-means clustering method based on shape context similarity and area-to-length ratio. The experimental results indicated that the proposed method could effectively improve the accuracy of building change detection compared with some popular change detection methods.


2013 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Aghababaee ◽  
J. Amini ◽  
Y.C. Tzeng

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