4.7 Article

Optical and SAR Image Matching Using Pixelwise Deep Dense Features

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Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/LGRS.2020.3039473

Keywords

Optical imaging; Radar polarimetry; Nonlinear optics; Optical sensors; Geometrical optics; Spatial resolution; Optical computing; Convolutional neural network (CNN); fast Fourier transform (FFT); hardest negative; optical and SAR image matching; pixelwise deep dense features; Siamese network

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This study proposes the use of a Siamese convolutional neural network (CNN) architecture to address the challenges in optical and SAR image matching. By learning pixelwise deep dense features, it balances the learning of high-level semantic information and low-level fine-grained information, resulting in more accurate and precise image matching.
Image matching is a primary technology to fuse the complementary information from optical and SAR images. Due to the high nonlinear radiometric and geometric relationship, the optical and SAR image matching task remains a widely unsolved challenge. In this study, we propose to use a Siamese convolutional neural network (CNN) architecture to learn pixelwise deep dense features. The proposed network is able to balance the learning of high-level semantic information and low-level fine-grained information, which is nonnegligible for feature matching task. Under the local searching framework, the loss function is defined based on the score map produced by the sum of squared differences (SSDs) between the learned pixelwise dense features of local optical and the SAR image patches, with a fast implementation in the frequency domain. The hardest negative mining strategy is adopted to increase the discrimination of the network. Extensive experiments are conducted on optical and SAR image pairs of different spatial resolution and different landcover types, verifying the superiority and robustness of the proposed method in terms of matching accuracy and matching precision.

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