Segmentation of a High Resolution Urban Scene Using Texture Operators.

Abstract

This paper describes a study aimed at segmenting a high resolution black and white image of Sunnyvale, California. In this study regions were classified as belonging to any one of nine classes, residential, commercial/industrial, mobile home, water, dry land, runway/taxiway, aircraft parking, multilane highway, and vehicle parking. The classes were selected so that they directly relate to the Defense Mapping Agency's Mapping, Charting and Geodesy tanglible features. To attack the problem a statistical segmentation procedure was devised. The primitive operators used to drive the segmentation are texture measures derived from coocurrence matrices. The segmentation procedure considers three kinds of regions at each level of the segmentation, uniform, boundary and unspecified. At every level the procedure differentiates uniform regions from boundary and unspecified regions. It then assigns a class label to the uniform regions. The boundary and unspecified regions are split to form higher level regions. The methodologies involved are mathematically developed as a series of hypothesis tests. While only a one level segmentation was performed studies are described which show the capabilities of each of these hypothesis tests.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Sep 01, 1982
Accession Number
ADA133276

Entities

People

  • Charles A. Harlow
  • Mohan M. Trivedi
  • Richard W. Conners

Organizations

  • Louisiana State University

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Air Platforms
  • Energy and Power Technologies
  • Human Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Accuracy
  • Aerial Photographs
  • Aircrafts
  • Algorithms
  • Computers
  • Digital Images
  • Heuristic Methods
  • High Resolution
  • Image Processing
  • Image Segmentation
  • Images
  • Information Science
  • Orientation (Direction)
  • Photographs
  • Remote Sensing
  • Security
  • Vehicles

Readers

  • Computer Vision.
  • Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) of Proposed Air Force Base Actions.