4.6 Article

MSARN: A Deep Neural Network Based on an Adaptive Recalibration Mechanism for Multiscale and Arbitrary-Oriented SAR Ship Detection

Journal

IEEE ACCESS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages 159262-159283

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2019.2951030

Keywords

Marine vehicles; Synthetic aperture radar; Radar polarimetry; Feature extraction; Detection algorithms; Remote sensing; Adaptation models; Ship detection; synthetic aperture radar (SAR); adaptive recalibration; neural network

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61773389, 61833016, 61573365]

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Ship detection plays an important role in synthetic aperture radar (SAR) image interpretation. However, there are still some difficulties in SAR ship detection. First, ships often have a large aspect ratio and arbitrary directionality in SAR images. Traditional detection algorithms can cause the detection area to be redundant, which makes it difficult to accurately locate the target in complex scenes. Second, ships in ports are often densely arranged, and the effective identification of densely arranged ships is complicated. Finally, ships in SAR images exist at a variety of scales due to the multiresolution imaging modes used and ship shape variations, which pose a considerable challenge for ship detection. To solve the above problems, we propose a multiscale adaptive recalibration network (MSARN) to detect multiscale and arbitrarily oriented ships in complex scenarios. The recalibration of the extracted multiscale features through global information increases the sensitivity of the network to the target angle, thereby increasing the accuracy of positioning. In particular, we designed a pyramid anchor and a loss function to match the rotated target. In addition, we modified the rotation non-maximum suppression (RNMS) method to solve the problem of the large overlap ratio of the detection box. The proposed model combines the positioning advantage of rotation detection with the speed advantage of a single-stage framework. Experiments show that based on the SAR rotation ship detection (SRSD) data set, the proposed algorithm has a faster detection speed and higher accuracy than some state-of-the-art methods.

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