Some basic quantitative analysis techniques of digitized high resolution atomic image are developed in this paper. We describe how to divide the atomic image into small independent areas with special structure information by the valley mesh segmentation method. The procedure is with regard to the br
Three-Class Markovian Segmentation of High-Resolution Sonar Images
✍ Scribed by M. Mignotte; C. Collet; P. Pérez; P. Bouthemy
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 628 KB
- Volume
- 76
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1077-3142
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✦ Synopsis
This paper presents an original method for analyzing, in an unsupervised way, images supplied by high resolution sonar. We aim at segmenting the sonar image into three kinds of regions: echo areas (due to the reflection of the acoustic wave on the object), shadow areas (corresponding to a lack of acoustic reverberation behind an object lying on the sea-bed), and sea-bottom reverberation areas. This unsupervised method estimates the parameters of noise distributions, modeled by a Weibull probability density function (PDF), and the label field parameters, modeled by a Markov random field (MRF). For the estimation step, we adopt a maximum likelihood technique for the noise model parameters and a least-squares method to estimate the MRF prior model. Then, in order to obtain an accurate segmentation map, we have designed a two-step process that finds the shadow and the echo regions separately, using the previously estimated parameters. First, we introduce a scale-causal and spatial model called SCM (scale causal multigrid), based on a multigrid energy minimization strategy, to find the shadow class. Second, we propose a MRF monoscale model using a priori information (at different level of knowledge) based on physical properties of each region, which allows us to distinguish echo areas from seabottom reverberation. This technique has been successfully applied to real sonar images and is compatible with automatic processing of massive amounts of data.
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