个人信息Personal Information
教授
博士生导师
硕士生导师
主要任职:软件学院、大连理工大学-立命馆大学国际信息与软件学院院长、党委副书记
性别:男
毕业院校:西安交通大学
学位:博士
所在单位:软件学院、国际信息与软件学院
学科:软件工程. 计算数学
电子邮箱:xin.fan@dlut.edu.cn
Adaptive Kalman Filtering for Histogram-Based Appearance Learning in Infrared Imagery
点击次数:
论文类型:期刊论文
发表时间:2012-11-01
发表刊物:IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON IMAGE PROCESSING
收录刊物:SCIE、EI、Scopus
卷号:21
期号:11
页面范围:4622-4635
ISSN号:1057-7149
关键字:Adaptive Kalman filter; appearance learning; histogram-based appearance model; infrared tracking
摘要:Targets of interest in video acquired from imaging infrared sensors often exhibit profound appearance variations due to a variety of factors, including complex target maneuvers, ego-motion of the sensor platform, background clutter, etc., making it difficult to maintain a reliable detection process and track lock over extended time periods. Two key issues in overcoming this problem are how to represent the target and how to learn its appearance online. In this paper, we adopt a recent appearance model that estimates the pixel intensity histograms as well as the distribution of local standard deviations in both the foreground and background regions for robust target representation. Appearance learning is then cast as an adaptive Kalman filtering problem where the process and measurement noise variances are both unknown. We formulate this problem using both covariance matching and, for the first time in a visual tracking application, the recent autocovariance least-squares (ALS) method. Although convergence of the ALS algorithm is guaranteed only for the case of globally wide sense stationary process and measurement noises, we demonstrate for the first time that the technique can often be applied with great effectiveness under the much weaker assumption of piecewise stationarity. The performance advantages of the ALS method relative to the classical covariance matching are illustrated by means of simulated stationary and nonstationary systems. Against real data, our results show that the ALS-based algorithm outperforms the covariance matching as well as the traditional histogram similarity-based methods, achieving sub-pixel tracking accuracy against the well-known AMCOM closure sequences and the recent SENSIAC automatic target recognition dataset.