2009
DOI: 10.2172/993911
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Robust real-time change detection in high jitter.

Abstract: A new method is introduced for real-time detection of transient change in scenes observed by staring sensors that are subject to platform jitter, pixel defects, variable focus, and other real-world challenges. The approach uses flexible statistical models for the scene background and its variability, which are continually updated to track gradual drift in the sensor's performance and the scene under observation. Two separate models represent temporal and spatial variations in pixel intensity. For the temporal … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Object detections are generated from raw frame data using normalized difference change detection [32] and fast approximate power iteration subspace tracking [33] for temporal background estimation. The single-object measurement function is linear-Gaussian with corresponding likelihood g(z|x) = N (z; Hx, R) , (77)…”
Section: Sensor and Scene Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Object detections are generated from raw frame data using normalized difference change detection [32] and fast approximate power iteration subspace tracking [33] for temporal background estimation. The single-object measurement function is linear-Gaussian with corresponding likelihood g(z|x) = N (z; Hx, R) , (77)…”
Section: Sensor and Scene Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Object detections are generated from raw frame data using normalized difference change detection [30] and fast approximate power iteration subspace tracking [31] for tempo-ral background estimation. The single-object measurement function is linear-Gaussian with corresponding likelihood…”
Section: Sensor and Scene Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, Algorithm 11.2, as well as most RPCA algorithms, have a high sensitivity to camera jitter, which can affect airborne and space-based sensors [53] as well as fixed groundbased cameras [10] subject to wind. Algorithm 11.2 does the job, eliminating the batch processing mode, typically needed for RPCA algorithms whereby a large number of frames have to be observed before starting any processing.…”
Section: Transform Invariant Incremental Rpcamentioning
confidence: 99%