Bachoo, AKDe Villiers, JPNicolls, FLe Roux, Francois PJ2011-09-272011-09-272011-04Bachoo, AK, De Villiers, JP, Nicolls, F, et al. 2011. Quantitative analysis of the improvement in high zoom maritime tracking due to real-time image enhancement. Proceedings of SPIE, Signal Processing, Sensor Fusion, and Target Recognition XX. Orlando, USA, 25 - 27 April 2011, pp 13http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5182Proceedings of SPIE, Signal Processing, Sensor Fusion, and Target Recognition XX. Orlando, USA, 25 - 27 April 2011This work aims to evaluate the improvement in the performance of tracking small maritime targets due to real-time enhancement of the video streams from high zoom cameras on pan-tilt pedestal. Due to atmospheric conditions these images can frequently have poor contrast, or exposure of the target if it is far and thus small in the camera's field of view. A 300mm focal length lens and machine vision camera were mounted on a pan-tilt unit and used to observe the False Bay near Simon's Town, South Africa. A ground truth data-set was created by performing a least squares geo-alignment of the camera system and placing a differential global position system receiver on a target boat, thus allowing the boat's position in the camera's field of view to be determined. Common tracking techniques including level-sets, Kalman filters and particle filters were implemented to run on the central processing unit of the tracking computer. Image enhancement techniques including multi-scale tone mapping, interpolated local histogram equalisation and several sharpening techniques were implemented on the graphics processing unit. This allowed the 1.3 mega-pixel 20 frames per second video stream to be processed in real-time. A quantified measurement of each tracking algorithm's robustness in the presence of sea-glint, low contrast visibility and sea clutter - such as white caps is performed on the raw recorded video data. These results are then compared to those obtained using data enhanced with the algorithms described.enVisual trackingReal-time video processingImage sharpeningImage enhancementMaritime trackingKalman filtersParticle filtersSignal processingSensor fusionTarget recognitionQuantitative analysis of the improvement in high zoom maritime tracking due to real-time image enhancementConference PresentationBachoo, A., De Villiers, J., Nicolls, F., & Le Roux, F. P. (2011). Quantitative analysis of the improvement in high zoom maritime tracking due to real-time image enhancement. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5182Bachoo, AK, JP De Villiers, F Nicolls, and Francois PJ Le Roux. "Quantitative analysis of the improvement in high zoom maritime tracking due to real-time image enhancement." (2011): http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5182Bachoo A, De Villiers J, Nicolls F, Le Roux FP, Quantitative analysis of the improvement in high zoom maritime tracking due to real-time image enhancement; 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5182 .TY - Conference Presentation AU - Bachoo, AK AU - De Villiers, JP AU - Nicolls, F AU - Le Roux, Francois PJ AB - This work aims to evaluate the improvement in the performance of tracking small maritime targets due to real-time enhancement of the video streams from high zoom cameras on pan-tilt pedestal. Due to atmospheric conditions these images can frequently have poor contrast, or exposure of the target if it is far and thus small in the camera's field of view. A 300mm focal length lens and machine vision camera were mounted on a pan-tilt unit and used to observe the False Bay near Simon's Town, South Africa. A ground truth data-set was created by performing a least squares geo-alignment of the camera system and placing a differential global position system receiver on a target boat, thus allowing the boat's position in the camera's field of view to be determined. Common tracking techniques including level-sets, Kalman filters and particle filters were implemented to run on the central processing unit of the tracking computer. Image enhancement techniques including multi-scale tone mapping, interpolated local histogram equalisation and several sharpening techniques were implemented on the graphics processing unit. This allowed the 1.3 mega-pixel 20 frames per second video stream to be processed in real-time. A quantified measurement of each tracking algorithm's robustness in the presence of sea-glint, low contrast visibility and sea clutter - such as white caps is performed on the raw recorded video data. These results are then compared to those obtained using data enhanced with the algorithms described. DA - 2011-04 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Visual tracking KW - Real-time video processing KW - Image sharpening KW - Image enhancement KW - Maritime tracking KW - Kalman filters KW - Particle filters KW - Signal processing KW - Sensor fusion KW - Target recognition LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2011 T1 - Quantitative analysis of the improvement in high zoom maritime tracking due to real-time image enhancement TI - Quantitative analysis of the improvement in high zoom maritime tracking due to real-time image enhancement UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/5182 ER -