학술논문

Variability index constant false alarm rate for marine target detection
Document Type
Conference
Source
2018 Conference on Signal Processing And Communication Engineering Systems (SPACES) Signal Processing And Communication Engineering Systems (SPACES), 2018 Conference on. :171-175 Jan, 2018
Subject
Aerospace
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Computing and Processing
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Signal Processing and Analysis
Microsoft Windows
Reverberation
Program processors
Indexes
Image edge detection
Estimation
Object detection
Variability Index CFAR
adaptive thresholding
marine target detection
radar signal processing
Language
Abstract
Paper discusses and evaluates the application of Variability Index Constant False Alarm Rate (VI-CFAR) in radar signal processing for detection of marine targets. Work has been published in past for evaluation of VI-CFAR for Sonar Targets [1], however no work is published to the knowledge of authors of this paper for evaluation of VI-CFAR for Marine Targets by experimental sea trials. Marine environment is often filled with inhomogeneities such as sea clutter, reverberation edges and multiple targets. “Constant False Alarm Rate” (CFAR) processors are implemented in signal processing to generate adaptive threshold for detecting targets out of nonhomogeneous environment as well as maintain constant false alarm. Variability Index CFAR processor adopts dynamically among Greatest-Of CFAR (GO-CFAR), Cell Averaging CFAR (CA-CFAR) and Smallest-Of CFAR (SO-CFAR) based on target background. Estimation of target background is performed based on values of two statistic namely Variability Index (VI) and Mean Ratio (MR). Based on statistics, the VI-CFAR processor dynamically generates adaptive threshold as per background estimation. Comparison analysis of VI-CFAR against GO-CFAR, CA-CFAR and SO-CFAR for marine target detection in homogeneous as well as non homogeneous environment is done in this paper. Comparison and evaluation is done by real experimental data collected by sea field trials.