English

Inverse Airborne Optical Sectioning

Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition 2022-07-28 v1 Image and Video Processing

Abstract

We present Inverse Airborne Optical Sectioning (IAOS) an optical analogy to Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar (ISAR). Moving targets, such as walking people, that are heavily occluded by vegetation can be made visible and tracked with a stationary optical sensor (e.g., a hovering camera drone above forest). We introduce the principles of IAOS (i.e., inverse synthetic aperture imaging), explain how the signal of occluders can be further suppressed by filtering the Radon transform of the image integral, and present how targets motion parameters can be estimated manually and automatically. Finally, we show that while tracking occluded targets in conventional aerial images is infeasible, it becomes efficiently possible in integral images that result from IAOS.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2207.13344,
  title  = {Inverse Airborne Optical Sectioning},
  author = {Rakesh John Amala Arokia Nathan and Indrajit Kurmi and Oliver Bimber},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2207.13344},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

12 pages, 5 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-25T01:15:57.279Z