CVJun 8, 2022Code
Learning Digital Terrain Models from Point Clouds: ALS2DTM Dataset and Rasterization-based GANHoàng-Ân Lê, Florent Guiotte, Minh-Tan Pham et al.
Despite the popularity of deep neural networks in various domains, the extraction of digital terrain models (DTMs) from airborne laser scanning (ALS) point clouds is still challenging. This might be due to the lack of dedicated large-scale annotated dataset and the data-structure discrepancy between point clouds and DTMs. To promote data-driven DTM extraction, this paper collects from open sources a large-scale dataset of ALS point clouds and corresponding DTMs with various urban, forested, and mountainous scenes. A baseline method is proposed as the first attempt to train a Deep neural network to extract digital Terrain models directly from ALS point clouds via Rasterization techniques, coined DeepTerRa. Extensive studies with well-established methods are performed to benchmark the dataset and analyze the challenges in learning to extract DTM from point clouds. The experimental results show the interest of the agnostic data-driven approach, with sub-metric error level compared to methods designed for DTM extraction. The data and source code is provided at https://lhoangan.github.io/deepterra/ for reproducibility and further similar research.
CVAug 24, 2024Code
Variational Autoencoder for Anomaly Detection: A Comparative StudyHuy Hoang Nguyen, Cuong Nhat Nguyen, Xuan Tung Dao et al.
This paper aims to conduct a comparative analysis of contemporary Variational Autoencoder (VAE) architectures employed in anomaly detection, elucidating their performance and behavioral characteristics within this specific task. The architectural configurations under consideration encompass the original VAE baseline, the VAE with a Gaussian Random Field prior (VAE-GRF), and the VAE incorporating a vision transformer (ViT-VAE). The findings reveal that ViT-VAE exhibits exemplary performance across various scenarios, whereas VAE-GRF may necessitate more intricate hyperparameter tuning to attain its optimal performance state. Additionally, to mitigate the propensity for over-reliance on results derived from the widely used MVTec dataset, this paper leverages the recently-public MiAD dataset for benchmarking. This deliberate inclusion seeks to enhance result competitiveness by alleviating the impact of domain-specific models tailored exclusively for MVTec, thereby contributing to a more robust evaluation framework. Codes is available at https://github.com/endtheme123/VAE-compare.git.
MLJun 17, 2022
Spherical Sliced-WassersteinClément Bonet, Paul Berg, Nicolas Courty et al.
Many variants of the Wasserstein distance have been introduced to reduce its original computational burden. In particular the Sliced-Wasserstein distance (SW), which leverages one-dimensional projections for which a closed-form solution of the Wasserstein distance is available, has received a lot of interest. Yet, it is restricted to data living in Euclidean spaces, while the Wasserstein distance has been studied and used recently on manifolds. We focus more specifically on the sphere, for which we define a novel SW discrepancy, which we call spherical Sliced-Wasserstein, making a first step towards defining SW discrepancies on manifolds. Our construction is notably based on closed-form solutions of the Wasserstein distance on the circle, together with a new spherical Radon transform. Along with efficient algorithms and the corresponding implementations, we illustrate its properties in several machine learning use cases where spherical representations of data are at stake: sampling on the sphere, density estimation on real earth data or hyperspherical auto-encoders.
CVAug 31, 2024
Mapping earth mounds from spaceBaki Uzun, Shivam Pande, Gwendal Cachin-Bernard et al.
Regular patterns of vegetation are considered widespread landscapes, although their global extent has never been estimated. Among them, spotted landscapes are of particular interest in the context of climate change. Indeed, regularly spaced vegetation spots in semi-arid shrublands result from extreme resource depletion and prefigure catastrophic shift of the ecosystem to a homogeneous desert, while termite mounds also producing spotted landscapes were shown to increase robustness to climate change. Yet, their identification at large scale calls for automatic methods, for instance using the popular deep learning framework, able to cope with a vast amount of remote sensing data, e.g., optical satellite imagery. In this paper, we tackle this problem and benchmark some state-of-the-art deep networks on several landscapes and geographical areas. Despite the promising results we obtained, we found that more research is needed to be able to map automatically these earth mounds from space.
CVJul 13, 2023
Multimodal Object Detection in Remote SensingAbdelbadie Belmouhcine, Jean-Christophe Burnel, Luc Courtrai et al.
Object detection in remote sensing is a crucial computer vision task that has seen significant advancements with deep learning techniques. However, most existing works in this area focus on the use of generic object detection and do not leverage the potential of multimodal data fusion. In this paper, we present a comparison of methods for multimodal object detection in remote sensing, survey available multimodal datasets suitable for evaluation, and discuss future directions.
CVJul 13, 2023
Weakly supervised marine animal detection from remote sensing images using vector-quantized variational autoencoderMinh-Tan Pham, Hugo Gangloff, Sébastien Lefèvre
This paper studies a reconstruction-based approach for weakly-supervised animal detection from aerial images in marine environments. Such an approach leverages an anomaly detection framework that computes metrics directly on the input space, enhancing interpretability and anomaly localization compared to feature embedding methods. Building upon the success of Vector-Quantized Variational Autoencoders in anomaly detection on computer vision datasets, we adapt them to the marine animal detection domain and address the challenge of handling noisy data. To evaluate our approach, we compare it with existing methods in the context of marine animal detection from aerial image data. Experiments conducted on two dedicated datasets demonstrate the superior performance of the proposed method over recent studies in the literature. Our framework offers improved interpretability and localization of anomalies, providing valuable insights for monitoring marine ecosystems and mitigating the impact of human activities on marine animals.
CVJun 16, 2023
Joint multi-modal Self-Supervised pre-training in Remote Sensing: Application to Methane Source ClassificationPaul Berg, Minh-Tan Pham, Nicolas Courty
With the current ubiquity of deep learning methods to solve computer vision and remote sensing specific tasks, the need for labelled data is growing constantly. However, in many cases, the annotation process can be long and tedious depending on the expertise needed to perform reliable annotations. In order to alleviate this need for annotations, several self-supervised methods have recently been proposed in the literature. The core principle behind these methods is to learn an image encoder using solely unlabelled data samples. In earth observation, there are opportunities to exploit domain-specific remote sensing image data in order to improve these methods. Specifically, by leveraging the geographical position associated with each image, it is possible to cross reference a location captured from multiple sensors, leading to multiple views of the same locations. In this paper, we briefly review the core principles behind so-called joint-embeddings methods and investigate the usage of multiple remote sensing modalities in self-supervised pre-training. We evaluate the final performance of the resulting encoders on the task of methane source classification.
CVDec 12, 2025
Adaptive federated learning for ship detection across diverse satellite imagery sourcesTran-Vu La, Minh-Tan Pham, Yu Li et al.
We investigate the application of Federated Learning (FL) for ship detection across diverse satellite datasets, offering a privacy-preserving solution that eliminates the need for data sharing or centralized collection. This approach is particularly advantageous for handling commercial satellite imagery or sensitive ship annotations. Four FL models including FedAvg, FedProx, FedOpt, and FedMedian, are evaluated and compared to a local training baseline, where the YOLOv8 ship detection model is independently trained on each dataset without sharing learned parameters. The results reveal that FL models substantially improve detection accuracy over training on smaller local datasets and achieve performance levels close to global training that uses all datasets during the training. Furthermore, the study underscores the importance of selecting appropriate FL configurations, such as the number of communication rounds and local training epochs, to optimize detection precision while maintaining computational efficiency.
CVNov 7, 2023Code
Data exploitation: multi-task learning of object detection and semantic segmentation on partially annotated dataHoàng-Ân Lê, Minh-Tan Pham
Multi-task partially annotated data where each data point is annotated for only a single task are potentially helpful for data scarcity if a network can leverage the inter-task relationship. In this paper, we study the joint learning of object detection and semantic segmentation, the two most popular vision problems, from multi-task data with partial annotations. Extensive experiments are performed to evaluate each task performance and explore their complementarity when a multi-task network cannot optimize both tasks simultaneously. We propose employing knowledge distillation to leverage joint-task optimization. The experimental results show favorable results for multi-task learning and knowledge distillation over single-task learning and even full supervision scenario. All code and data splits are available at https://github.com/lhoangan/multas
CVAug 25, 2023
Burnt area extraction from high-resolution satellite images based on anomaly detectionOscar David Rafael Narvaez Luces, Minh-Tan Pham, Quentin Poterek et al.
Wildfire detection using satellite images is a widely studied task in remote sensing with many applications to fire delineation and mapping. Recently, deep learning methods have become a scalable solution to automate this task, especially in the field of unsupervised learning where no training data is available. This is particularly important in the context of emergency risk monitoring where fast and effective detection is needed, generally based on high-resolution satellite data. Among various approaches, Anomaly Detection (AD) appears to be highly potential thanks to its broad applications in computer vision, medical imaging, as well as remote sensing. In this work, we build upon the framework of Vector Quantized Variational Autoencoder (VQ-VAE), a popular reconstruction-based AD method with discrete latent spaces, to perform unsupervised burnt area extraction. We integrate VQ-VAE into an end-to-end framework with an intensive post-processing step using dedicated vegetation, water and brightness indexes. Our experiments conducted on high-resolution SPOT-6/7 images provide promising results of the proposed technique, showing its high potential in future research on unsupervised burnt area extraction.
CVJul 18, 2023
Knowledge Distillation for Object Detection: from generic to remote sensing datasetsHoàng-Ân Lê, Minh-Tan Pham
Knowledge distillation, a well-known model compression technique, is an active research area in both computer vision and remote sensing communities. In this paper, we evaluate in a remote sensing context various off-the-shelf object detection knowledge distillation methods which have been originally developed on generic computer vision datasets such as Pascal VOC. In particular, methods covering both logit mimicking and feature imitation approaches are applied for vehicle detection using the well-known benchmarks such as xView and VEDAI datasets. Extensive experiments are performed to compare the relative performance and interrelationships of the methods. Experimental results show high variations and confirm the importance of result aggregation and cross validation on remote sensing datasets.
CVJun 17, 2023
Object counting from aerial remote sensing images: application to wildlife and marine mammalsTanya Singh, Hugo Gangloff, Minh-Tan Pham
Anthropogenic activities pose threats to wildlife and marine fauna, prompting the need for efficient animal counting methods. This research study utilizes deep learning techniques to automate counting tasks. Inspired by previous studies on crowd and animal counting, a UNet model with various backbones is implemented, which uses Gaussian density maps for training, bypassing the need of training a detector. The new model is applied to the task of counting dolphins and elephants in aerial images. Quantitative evaluation shows promising results, with the EfficientNet-B5 backbone achieving the best performance for African elephants and the ResNet18 backbone for dolphins. The model accurately locates animals despite complex image background conditions. By leveraging artificial intelligence, this research contributes to wildlife conservation efforts and enhances coexistence between humans and wildlife through efficient object counting without detection from aerial remote sensing.
CVDec 12, 2025
Enhancing deep learning performance on burned area delineation from SPOT-6/7 imagery for emergency managementMaria Rodriguez, Minh-Tan Pham, Martin Sudmanns et al.
After a wildfire, delineating burned areas (BAs) is crucial for quantifying damages and supporting ecosystem recovery. Current BA mapping approaches rely on computer vision models trained on post-event remote sensing imagery, but often overlook their applicability to time-constrained emergency management scenarios. This study introduces a supervised semantic segmentation workflow aimed at boosting both the performance and efficiency of BA delineation. It targets SPOT-6/7 imagery due to its very high resolution and on-demand availability. Experiments are evaluated based on Dice score, Intersection over Union, and inference time. The results show that U-Net and SegFormer models perform similarly with limited training data. However, SegFormer requires more resources, challenging its practical use in emergencies. Incorporating land cover data as an auxiliary task enhances model robustness without increasing inference time. Lastly, Test-Time Augmentation improves BA delineation performance but raises inference time, which can be mitigated with optimization methods like Mixed Precision.
CVMar 24
SIGMA: A Physics-Based Benchmark for Gas Chimney Understanding in Seismic ImagesBao Truong, Quang Nguyen, Baoru Huang et al.
Seismic images reconstruct subsurface reflectivity from field recordings, guiding exploration and reservoir monitoring. Gas chimneys are vertical anomalies caused by subsurface fluid migration. Understanding these phenomena is crucial for assessing hydrocarbon potential and avoiding drilling hazards. However, accurate detection is challenging due to strong seismic attenuation and scattering. Traditional physics-based methods are computationally expensive and sensitive to model errors, while deep learning offers efficient alternatives, yet lacks labeled datasets. In this work, we introduce \textbf{SIGMA}, a new physics-based dataset for gas chimney understanding in seismic images, featuring (i) pixel-level gas-chimney mask for detection and (ii) paired degraded and ground-truth image for enhancement. We employed physics-based methods that cover a wide range of geological settings and data acquisition conditions. Comprehensive experiments demonstrate that SIGMA serves as a challenging benchmark for gas chimney interpretation and benefits general seismic understanding.
CVNov 26, 2024Code
Box for Mask and Mask for Box: weak losses for multi-task partially supervised learningHoàng-Ân Lê, Paul Berg, Minh-Tan Pham
Object detection and semantic segmentation are both scene understanding tasks yet they differ in data structure and information level. Object detection requires box coordinates for object instances while semantic segmentation requires pixel-wise class labels. Making use of one task's information to train the other would be beneficial for multi-task partially supervised learning where each training example is annotated only for a single task, having the potential to expand training sets with different-task datasets. This paper studies various weak losses for partially annotated data in combination with existing supervised losses. We propose Box-for-Mask and Mask-for-Box strategies, and their combination BoMBo, to distil necessary information from one task annotations to train the other. Ablation studies and experimental results on VOC and COCO datasets show favorable results for the proposed idea. Source code and data splits can be found at https://github.com/lhoangan/multas.
CVMay 6, 2025Code
Towards Efficient Benchmarking of Foundation Models in Remote Sensing: A Capabilities Encoding ApproachPierre Adorni, Minh-Tan Pham, Stéphane May et al.
Foundation models constitute a significant advancement in computer vision: after a single, albeit costly, training phase, they can address a wide array of tasks. In the field of Earth observation, over 75 remote sensing vision foundation models have been developed in the past four years. However, none has consistently outperformed the others across all available downstream tasks. To facilitate their comparison, we propose a cost-effective method for predicting a model's performance on multiple downstream tasks without the need for fine-tuning on each one. This method is based on what we call "capabilities encoding." The utility of this novel approach is twofold: we demonstrate its potential to simplify the selection of a foundation model for a given new task, and we employ it to offer a fresh perspective on the existing literature, suggesting avenues for future research. Codes are available at https://github.com/pierreadorni/capabilities-encoding.
CVDec 17, 2025
From Words to Wavelengths: VLMs for Few-Shot Multispectral Object DetectionManuel Nkegoum, Minh-Tan Pham, Élisa Fromont et al.
Multispectral object detection is critical for safety-sensitive applications such as autonomous driving and surveillance, where robust perception under diverse illumination conditions is essential. However, the limited availability of annotated multispectral data severely restricts the training of deep detectors. In such data-scarce scenarios, textual class information can serve as a valuable source of semantic supervision. Motivated by the recent success of Vision-Language Models (VLMs) in computer vision, we explore their potential for few-shot multispectral object detection. Specifically, we adapt two representative VLM-based detectors, Grounding DINO and YOLO-World, to handle multispectral inputs and propose an effective mechanism to integrate text, visual and thermal modalities. Through extensive experiments on two popular multispectral image benchmarks, FLIR and M3FD, we demonstrate that VLM-based detectors not only excel in few-shot regimes, significantly outperforming specialized multispectral models trained with comparable data, but also achieve competitive or superior results under fully supervised settings. Our findings reveal that the semantic priors learned by large-scale VLMs effectively transfer to unseen spectral modalities, ofFering a powerful pathway toward data-efficient multispectral perception.
CVNov 26, 2025Code
EoS-FM: Can an Ensemble of Specialist Models act as a Generalist Feature Extractor?Pierre Adorni, Minh-Tan Pham, Stéphane May et al.
Recent advances in foundation models have shown great promise in domains such as natural language processing and computer vision, and similar efforts are now emerging in the Earth Observation community. These models aim to generalize across tasks with limited supervision, reducing the need for training separate models for each task. However, current strategies, which largely focus on scaling model size and dataset volume, require prohibitive computational and data resources, limiting accessibility to only a few large institutions. Moreover, this paradigm of ever-larger models stands in stark contrast with the principles of sustainable and environmentally responsible AI, as it leads to immense carbon footprints and resource inefficiency. In this work, we present a novel and efficient alternative: an Ensemble-of-Specialists framework for building Remote Sensing Foundation Models (RSFMs). Our method decomposes the training process into lightweight, task-specific ConvNeXtV2 specialists that can be frozen and reused. This modular approach offers strong advantages in efficiency, interpretability, and extensibility. Moreover, it naturally supports federated training, pruning, and continuous specialist integration, making it particularly well-suited for collaborative and resource-constrained settings. Our framework sets a new direction for building scalable and efficient RSFMs. All codes and pretrained models are available at https://github.com/pierreadorni/EoS-FM.
CVSep 12, 2023
Self-Training and Multi-Task Learning for Limited Data: Evaluation Study on Object DetectionHoàng-Ân Lê, Minh-Tan Pham
Self-training allows a network to learn from the predictions of a more complicated model, thus often requires well-trained teacher models and mixture of teacher-student data while multi-task learning jointly optimizes different targets to learn salient interrelationship and requires multi-task annotations for each training example. These frameworks, despite being particularly data demanding have potentials for data exploitation if such assumptions can be relaxed. In this paper, we compare self-training object detection under the deficiency of teacher training data where students are trained on unseen examples by the teacher, and multi-task learning with partially annotated data, i.e. single-task annotation per training example. Both scenarios have their own limitation but potentially helpful with limited annotated data. Experimental results show the improvement of performance when using a weak teacher with unseen data for training a multi-task student. Despite the limited setup we believe the experimental results show the potential of multi-task knowledge distillation and self-training, which could be beneficial for future study. Source code is at https://lhoangan.github.io/multas.
CRJan 8
Leveraging Membership Inference Attacks for Privacy Measurement in Federated Learning for Remote Sensing ImagesAnh-Kiet Duong, Petra Gomez-Krämer, Hoàng-Ân Lê et al.
Federated Learning (FL) enables collaborative model training while keeping training data localized, allowing us to preserve privacy in various domains including remote sensing. However, recent studies show that FL models may still leak sensitive information through their outputs, motivating the need for rigorous privacy evaluation. In this paper, we leverage membership inference attacks (MIA) as a quantitative privacy measurement framework for FL applied to remote sensing image classification. We evaluate multiple black-box MIA techniques, including entropy-based attacks, modified entropy attacks, and the likelihood ratio attack, across different FL algorithms and communication strategies. Experiments conducted on two public scene classification datasets demonstrate that MIA effectively reveals privacy leakage not captured by accuracy alone. Our results show that communication-efficient FL strategies reduce MIA success rates while maintaining competitive performance. These findings confirm MIA as a practical metric and highlight the importance of integrating privacy measurement into FL system design for remote sensing applications.
CVMar 20, 2024
Leveraging feature communication in federated learning for remote sensing image classificationAnh-Kiet Duong, Hoàng-Ân Lê, Minh-Tan Pham
In the realm of Federated Learning (FL) applied to remote sensing image classification, this study introduces and assesses several innovative communication strategies. Our exploration includes feature-centric communication, pseudo-weight amalgamation, and a combined method utilizing both weights and features. Experiments conducted on two public scene classification datasets unveil the effectiveness of these strategies, showcasing accelerated convergence, heightened privacy, and reduced network information exchange. This research provides valuable insights into the implications of feature-centric communication in FL, offering potential applications tailored for remote sensing scenarios.
CVMay 24, 2024
Leveraging knowledge distillation for partial multi-task learning from multiple remote sensing datasetsHoàng-Ân Lê, Minh-Tan Pham
Partial multi-task learning where training examples are annotated for one of the target tasks is a promising idea in remote sensing as it allows combining datasets annotated for different tasks and predicting more tasks with fewer network parameters. The naïve approach to partial multi-task learning is sub-optimal due to the lack of all-task annotations for learning joint representations. This paper proposes using knowledge distillation to replace the need of ground truths for the alternate task and enhance the performance of such approach. Experiments conducted on the public ISPRS 2D Semantic Labeling Contest dataset show the effectiveness of the proposed idea on partial multi-task learning for semantic tasks including object detection and semantic segmentation in aerial images.
CVMar 20, 2024
Insight Into the Collocation of Multi-Source Satellite Imagery for Multi-Scale Vessel DetectionTran-Vu La, Minh-Tan Pham, Marco Chini
Ship detection from satellite imagery using Deep Learning (DL) is an indispensable solution for maritime surveillance. However, applying DL models trained on one dataset to others having differences in spatial resolution and radiometric features requires many adjustments. To overcome this issue, this paper focused on the DL models trained on datasets that consist of different optical images and a combination of radar and optical data. When dealing with a limited number of training images, the performance of DL models via this approach was satisfactory. They could improve 5-20% of average precision, depending on the optical images tested. Likewise, DL models trained on the combined optical and radar dataset could be applied to both optical and radar images. Our experiments showed that the models trained on an optical dataset could be used for radar images, while those trained on a radar dataset offered very poor scores when applied to optical images.
CVSep 25, 2025
FSMODNet: A Closer Look at Few-Shot Detection in Multispectral DataManuel Nkegoum, Minh-Tan Pham, Élisa Fromont et al.
Few-shot multispectral object detection (FSMOD) addresses the challenge of detecting objects across visible and thermal modalities with minimal annotated data. In this paper, we explore this complex task and introduce a framework named "FSMODNet" that leverages cross-modality feature integration to improve detection performance even with limited labels. By effectively combining the unique strengths of visible and thermal imagery using deformable attention, the proposed method demonstrates robust adaptability in complex illumination and environmental conditions. Experimental results on two public datasets show effective object detection performance in challenging low-data regimes, outperforming several baselines we established from state-of-the-art models. All code, models, and experimental data splits can be found at https://anonymous.4open.science/r/Test-B48D.
CVAug 21, 2025
Contributions to Label-Efficient Learning in Computer Vision and Remote SensingMinh-Tan Pham
This manuscript presents a series of my selected contributions to the topic of label-efficient learning in computer vision and remote sensing. The central focus of this research is to develop and adapt methods that can learn effectively from limited or partially annotated data, and can leverage abundant unlabeled data in real-world applications. The contributions span both methodological developments and domain-specific adaptations, in particular addressing challenges unique to Earth observation data such as multi-modality, spatial resolution variability, and scene heterogeneity. The manuscript is organized around four main axes including (1) weakly supervised learning for object discovery and detection based on anomaly-aware representations learned from large amounts of background images; (2) multi-task learning that jointly trains on multiple datasets with disjoint annotations to improve performance on object detection and semantic segmentation; (3) self-supervised and supervised contrastive learning with multimodal data to enhance scene classification in remote sensing; and (4) few-shot learning for hierarchical scene classification using both explicit and implicit modeling of class hierarchies. These contributions are supported by extensive experimental results across natural and remote sensing datasets, reflecting the outcomes of several collaborative research projects. The manuscript concludes by outlining ongoing and future research directions focused on scaling and enhancing label-efficient learning for real-world applications.
SDMay 28, 2025
RESOUND: Speech Reconstruction from Silent Videos via Acoustic-Semantic Decomposed ModelingLong-Khanh Pham, Thanh V. T. Tran, Minh-Tan Pham et al.
Lip-to-speech (L2S) synthesis, which reconstructs speech from visual cues, faces challenges in accuracy and naturalness due to limited supervision in capturing linguistic content, accents, and prosody. In this paper, we propose RESOUND, a novel L2S system that generates intelligible and expressive speech from silent talking face videos. Leveraging source-filter theory, our method involves two components: an acoustic path to predict prosody and a semantic path to extract linguistic features. This separation simplifies learning, allowing independent optimization of each representation. Additionally, we enhance performance by integrating speech units, a proven unsupervised speech representation technique, into waveform generation alongside mel-spectrograms. This allows RESOUND to synthesize prosodic speech while preserving content and speaker identity. Experiments conducted on two standard L2S benchmarks confirm the effectiveness of the proposed method across various metrics.
CVOct 31, 2019
Very high resolution Airborne PolSAR Image Classification using Convolutional Neural NetworksMinh-Tan Pham, Sébastien Lefèvre
In this work, we exploit convolutional neural networks (CNNs) for the classification of very high resolution (VHR) polarimetric SAR (PolSAR) data. Due to the significant appearance of heterogeneous textures within these data, not only polarimetric features but also structural tensors are exploited to feed CNN models. For deep networks, we use the SegNet model for semantic segmentation, which corresponds to pixelwise classification in remote sensing. Our experiments on the airborne F-SAR data show that for VHR PolSAR images, SegNet could provide high accuracy for the classification task; and introducing structural tensors together with polarimetric features as inputs could help the network to focus more on geometrical information to significantly improve the classification performance.
CVOct 22, 2019
Vehicle detection and counting from VHR satellite images: efforts and open issuesAlice Froidevaux, Andréa Julier, Agustin Lifschitz et al.
Detection of new infrastructures (commercial, logistics, industrial or residential) from satellite images constitutes a proven method to investigate and follow economic and urban growth. The level of activities or exploitation of these sites may be hardly determined by building inspection, but could be inferred from vehicle presence from nearby streets and parking lots. We present in this paper two deep learning-based models for vehicle counting from optical satellite images coming from the Pleiades sensor at 50-cm spatial resolution. Both segmentation (Tiramisu) and detection (YOLO) architectures were investigated. These networks were adapted, trained and validated on a data set including 87k vehicles, annotated using an interactive semi-automatic tool developed by the authors. Experimental results show that both segmentation and detection models could achieve a precision rate higher than 85% with a recall rate also high (76.4% and 71.9% for Tiramisu and YOLO respectively).
CVAug 3, 2018
Efficient texture retrieval using multiscale local extrema descriptors and covariance embeddingMinh-Tan Pham
This paper presents an efficient method for texture retrieval using multiscale feature extraction and embedding based on the local extrema keypoints. The idea is to first represent each texture image by its local maximum and local minimum pixels. The image is then divided into regular overlapping blocks and each one is characterized by a feature vector constructed from the radiometric, geometric and structural information of its local extrema. All feature vectors are finally embedded into a covariance matrix which will be exploited for dissimilarity measurement within retrieval task. Thanks to the method's simplicity, multiscale scheme can be easily implemented to improve its scale-space representation capacity. We argue that our handcrafted features are easy to implement, fast to run but can provide very competitive performance compared to handcrafted and CNN-based learned descriptors from the literature. In particular, the proposed framework provides highly competitive retrieval rate for several texture databases including 94.95% for MIT Vistex, 79.87% for Stex, 76.15% for Outex TC-00013 and 89.74% for USPtex.
CVJun 18, 2018
Classification of remote sensing images using attribute profiles and feature profiles from different trees: a comparative studyMinh-Tan Pham, Erchan Aptoula, Sébastien Lefèvre
The motivation of this paper is to conduct a comparative study on remote sensing image classification using the morphological attribute profiles (APs) and feature profiles (FPs) generated from different types of tree structures. Over the past few years, APs have been among the most effective methods to model the image's spatial and contextual information. Recently, a novel extension of APs called FPs has been proposed by replacing pixel gray-levels with some statistical and geometrical features when forming the output profiles. FPs have been proved to be more efficient than the standard APs when generated from component trees (max-tree and min-tree). In this work, we investigate their performance on the inclusion tree (tree of shapes) and partition trees (alpha tree and omega tree). Experimental results from both panchromatic and hyperspectral images again confirm the efficiency of FPs compared to APs.
CVMar 27, 2018
Recent Developments from Attribute Profiles for Remote Sensing Image ClassificationMinh-Tan Pham, Sébastien Lefèvre, Erchan Aptoula et al.
Morphological attribute profiles (APs) are among the most effective methods to model the spatial and contextual information for the analysis of remote sensing images, especially for classification task. Since their first introduction to this field in early 2010's, many research studies have been contributed not only to exploit and adapt their use to different applications, but also to extend and improve their performance for better dealing with more complex data. In this paper, we revisit and discuss different developments and extensions from APs which have drawn significant attention from researchers in the past few years. These studies are analyzed and gathered based on the concept of multi-stage AP construction. In our experiments, a comparative study on classification results of two remote sensing data is provided in order to show their significant improvements compared to the originally proposed APs.
CVMar 22, 2018
Buried object detection from B-scan ground penetrating radar data using Faster-RCNNMinh-Tan Pham, Sébastien Lefèvre
In this paper, we adapt the Faster-RCNN framework for the detection of underground buried objects (i.e. hyperbola reflections) in B-scan ground penetrating radar (GPR) images. Due to the lack of real data for training, we propose to incorporate more simulated radargrams generated from different configurations using the gprMax toolbox. Our designed CNN is first pre-trained on the grayscale Cifar-10 database. Then, the Faster-RCNN framework based on the pre-trained CNN is trained and fine-tuned on both real and simulated GPR data. Preliminary detection results show that the proposed technique can provide significant improvements compared to classical computer vision methods and hence becomes quite promising to deal with this kind of specific GPR data even with few training samples.
CVNov 7, 2016
Texture and Color-based Image Retrieval Using the Local Extrema Features and Riemannian DistanceMinh-Tan Pham, Grégoire Mercier, Lionel Bombrun et al.
A novel efficient method for content-based image retrieval (CBIR) is developed in this paper using both texture and color features. Our motivation is to represent and characterize an input image by a set of local descriptors extracted at characteristic points (i.e. keypoints) within the image. Then, dissimilarity measure between images is calculated based on the geometric distance between the topological feature spaces (i.e. manifolds) formed by the sets of local descriptors generated from these images. In this work, we propose to extract and use the local extrema pixels as our feature points. Then, the so-called local extrema-based descriptor (LED) is generated for each keypoint by integrating all color, spatial as well as gradient information captured by a set of its nearest local extrema. Hence, each image is encoded by a LED feature point cloud and riemannian distances between these point clouds enable us to tackle CBIR. Experiments performed on Vistex, Stex and colored Brodatz texture databases using the proposed approach provide very efficient and competitive results compared to the state-of-the-art methods.