ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Sea-Surface Small Target Detection Based on Improved Markov Transition Fields

Ru Ye    
Hongyan Xing and Xing Zhou    

Resumen

Addressing the limitations of manually extracting features from small maritime target signals, this paper explores Markov transition fields and convolutional neural networks, proposing a detection method for small targets based on an improved Markov transition field. Initially, the raw data undergo a Fourier transform, feature fusion is performed on the series, and a spectrogram is generated using Markov transition fields to extract radar data features from both the time domain and frequency domain, providing a more comprehensive data representation for the detector. Then, the InceptionResnetV2 network is employed as a classifier, setting decision thresholds based on the softmax layer?s output, thus achieving controllable false alarms in the detection of small maritime targets. Additionally, transfer learning is introduced to address the issue of sample imbalance. The IPIX dataset is used for experimental verification. The experimental results show that the proposed detection method can deeply mine the differences between targets and the maritime clutter background, demonstrating superior detection performance. When the observation time is set to 1.024 s, the IMIRV2 detector performs best. Cross-validation with different data preprocessing methods and classification models reveals a significant advantage in the performance of the IMIRV2 detector, especially at low signal-to-noise ratios. Finally, a comparison with the performance of existing detectors indicates that the proposed method offers certain improvements.

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