4.5 Article

Exploring Flood Filling Networks for Instance Segmentation of XXL-Volumetric and Bulk Material CT Data

Journal

JOURNAL OF NONDESTRUCTIVE EVALUATION
Volume 40, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10921-020-00734-w

Keywords

Instance segmentation; Flood filling networks; XXL-CT; Big data

Funding

  1. Projekt DEAL

Ask authors/readers for more resources

XXL-CT can produce large scale volume datasets of scanned objects, but traditional automatic or manual segmentation is not feasible due to the complexity and unknown properties. Using segmentation algorithms for interactive and partial segmentation can assist in exploring and understanding such large scale volume data.
XXL-Computed Tomography (XXL-CT) is able to produce large scale volume datasets of scanned objects such as crash tested cars, sea and aircraft containers or cultural heritage objects. The acquired image data consists of volumes of up to and above 10,000(3) voxels which can relate up to many terabytes in file size and can contain multiple 10,000 of different entities of depicted objects. In order to extract specific information about these entities from the scanned objects in such vast datasets, segmentation or delineation of these parts is necessary. Due to unknown and varying properties (shapes, densities, materials, compositions) of these objects, as well as interfering acquisition artefacts, classical (automatic) segmentation is usually not feasible. Contrarily, a complete manual delineation is error-prone and time-consuming, and can only be performed by trained and experienced personnel. Hence, an interactive and partial segmentation of so-called chunks into tightly coupled assemblies or sub-assemblies may help the assessment, exploration and understanding of such large scale volume data. In order to assist users with such an (possibly interactive) instance segmentation for the data exploration process, we propose to utilize delineation algorithms with an approach derived from flood filling networks. We present primary results of a flood filling network implementation adapted to non-destructive testing applications based on large scale CT from various test objects, as well as real data of an airplane and describe the adaptions to this domain. Furthermore, we address and discuss segmentation challenges due to acquisition artefacts such as scattered radiation or beam hardening resulting in reduced data quality, which can severely impair the interactive segmentation results.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available