评估红外航空图像中考拉自动检测算法。

IF 3.4 3区 综合性期刊 Q2 CHEMISTRY, ANALYTICAL
Sensors Pub Date : 2024-10-31 DOI:10.3390/s24217048
Laith A H Al-Shimaysawee, Anthony Finn, Delene Weber, Morgan F Schebella, Russell S A Brinkworth
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引用次数: 0

摘要

有效的探测技术对于野生动物监测和保护应用非常重要,对于生活在复杂环境中的物种尤其有帮助,例如树栖动物考拉(Phascolarctos cinereus)。红外热像仪和无人机的应用取得了令人鼓舞的成果,无论探测工作是由人类观察员还是自动算法完成。就桉树种植园考拉探测而言,林业作业期间对观测人员存在风险。此外,检查每一棵树是一项艰巨而重复的任务,其带来的疲劳和乏味意味着自动检测方案尤为可取。然而,要获得较高的检测率并将误报率降到最低仍是一项具有挑战性的任务,尤其是在动物与其周围环境对比度较低的情况下。考拉的体型也很小,经常会被树冠、树干或树枝部分或全部遮挡,或者背景非常复杂。受生物启发的视觉系统在抑制杂波和增强昏暗物体与周围环境的对比度方面具有卓越的能力。本文介绍了一种受生物启发的检测算法,用于确定桉树种植园中考拉的位置,并与其他十种检测技术(包括基于图像处理和神经网络的方法)进行了性能评估。此外,还使用模拟数据和真实数据对这些种植园中树冠遮挡考拉的性质进行了研究。结果表明,受生物启发的方法明显优于基于神经网络和计算机视觉的竞争方法 27% 以上。对模拟和真实数据的分析表明,树茎和树冠对考拉的遮挡会对考拉的潜在检测产生重大影响,在已知考拉存在的图像中,高达 40% 的考拉被完全遮挡。我们的分析表明,考拉的热信号在接近图像中心时更有可能被遮挡(即考拉位于无人机的正下方),而在偏离天顶时则不太可能被遮挡。这对飞行考虑有影响。本文还介绍了一个新的精确地面实况数据集,该数据集是航空高动态范围红外图像,包含考拉热特征的实例。该数据集公开发布,为研究界提供支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Evaluation of Automated Object-Detection Algorithms for Koala Detection in Infrared Aerial Imagery.

Effective detection techniques are important for wildlife monitoring and conservation applications and are especially helpful for species that live in complex environments, such as arboreal animals like koalas (Phascolarctos cinereus). The implementation of infrared cameras and drones has demonstrated encouraging outcomes, regardless of whether the detection was performed by human observers or automated algorithms. In the case of koala detection in eucalyptus plantations, there is a risk to spotters during forestry operations. In addition, fatigue and tedium associated with the difficult and repetitive task of checking every tree means automated detection options are particularly desirable. However, obtaining high detection rates with minimal false alarms remains a challenging task, particularly when there is low contrast between the animals and their surroundings. Koalas are also small and often partially or fully occluded by canopy, tree stems, or branches, or the background is highly complex. Biologically inspired vision systems are known for their superior ability in suppressing clutter and enhancing the contrast of dim objects of interest against their surroundings. This paper introduces a biologically inspired detection algorithm to locate koalas in eucalyptus plantations and evaluates its performance against ten other detection techniques, including both image processing and neural-network-based approaches. The nature of koala occlusion by canopy cover in these plantations was also examined using a combination of simulated and real data. The results show that the biologically inspired approach significantly outperformed the competing neural-network- and computer-vision-based approaches by over 27%. The analysis of simulated and real data shows that koala occlusion by tree stems and canopy can have a significant impact on the potential detection of koalas, with koalas being fully occluded in up to 40% of images in which koalas were known to be present. Our analysis shows the koala's heat signature is more likely to be occluded when it is close to the centre of the image (i.e., it is directly under a drone) and less likely to be occluded off the zenith. This has implications for flight considerations. This paper also describes a new accurate ground-truth dataset of aerial high-dynamic-range infrared imagery containing instances of koala heat signatures. This dataset is made publicly available to support the research community.

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来源期刊
Sensors
Sensors 工程技术-电化学
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
12.80%
发文量
8430
审稿时长
1.7 months
期刊介绍: Sensors (ISSN 1424-8220) provides an advanced forum for the science and technology of sensors and biosensors. It publishes reviews (including comprehensive reviews on the complete sensors products), regular research papers and short notes. Our aim is to encourage scientists to publish their experimental and theoretical results in as much detail as possible. There is no restriction on the length of the papers. The full experimental details must be provided so that the results can be reproduced.
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