The papers included in this volume were part of the technical conference cited on the cover and title page. Papers were selected and subject to review by the editors and conference program committee. Some conference presentations may not be available for publication. The papers published in these proceedings reflect the work and thoughts of the authors and are published herein as submitted. The publisher is not responsible for the validity of the information or for any outcomes resulting from reliance thereon. Please use the following format to cite material from this book: Author(s), “Title of Paper,” in Signal and Data Processing of Small Targets 2015, edited by Oliver E. Drummond, Proceedings of SPIE Vol. 9596 (SPIE, Bellingham, WA, 2015) Article CID Number. ISSN: 0277-786X ISSN:1996-756X (electronic) ISBN: 9781628417623 Published by SPIE P.O. Box 10, Bellingham, Washington 98227-0010 USA Telephone +1 360 676 3290 (Pacific Time)·Fax +1 360 647 1445 SPIE.org Copyright © 2015, Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers. Copying of material in this book for internal or personal use, or for the internal or personal use of specific clients, beyond the fair use provisions granted by the U.S. Copyright Law is authorized by SPIE subject to payment of copying fees. The Transactional Reporting Service base fee for this volume is $18.00 per article (or portion thereof), which should be paid directly to the Copyright Clearance Center (CCC), 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923. Payment may also be made electronically through CCC Online at copyright.com. Other copying for republication, resale, advertising or promotion, or any form of systematic or multiple reproduction of any material in this book is prohibited except with permission in writing from the publisher. The CCC fee code is 0277-786X/15/$18.00. Printed in the United States of America. Publication of record for individual papers is online in the SPIE Digital Library.
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The CID Number appears on each page of the manuscript. The complete citation is used on the first page, and an abbreviated version on subsequent pages. AuthorsNumbers in the index correspond to the last two digits of the six-digit citation identifier (CID) article numbering system used in Proceedings of SPIE. The first four digits reflect the volume number. Base 36 numbering is employed for the last two digits and indicates the order of articles within the volume. Numbers start with 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, 09, 0A, 0B…0Z, followed by 10-1Z, 20-2Z, etc. Bogdanovic, Miro, 09 Boyd, John E., xi Breu, Jakob, 09 Charalampidis, Dimitrios, 0B Chen, Penghui, 0C Chen, Qi, 09 Chen, Qian, 0K Dong, Liquan, 07 Gu, Guohua, 0I, 0J, 0K Hallenborg, Eric, xxi He, Xiaoyu, 0C Hu, Jing, 04 Hui, Mei, 07 Hwee, Peh Chin, xxi Jaszewski, Martin, xxi Jiang, Yuesong, 0C Jilkov, Vesselin P., 0B Kong, Xiaofang, 0K Liu, Fan, 04 Liu, Ming, 07 Liu, Xiaohua, 07 Liu, Yun, 07 Lu, Mingfeng, 0A Roth, Tobias, 09 Sworder, David D., xi Wang, Jianing, 06 Wang, Jing, 0I Wang, Wenjuan, 0J Weiss, Christian A., 09 Wu, Jiande, 0B Wu, Yijian, 07 Xu, Fuyuan, 0I Xu, Xiaojian, 06, 0C Yang, Wei, 0J Yu, Yi, 04 Yuan, Ting, 09 Zhang, Feng, 0A Zhang, Yanshan, 0A Zhao, Yuejin, 07 Conference CommitteeProgram Track Chair
Conference Chair
Conference Co-chair
Conference Program Committee
Liyi Dai, U.S. Army Research Office (United States) Darren K. Emge, U.S. Army Edgewood Chemical Biological Center (United States) Denise E. Jones, U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command (United States) Karla K. Spriestersbach, Missile Defense Agency (United States) Steven W. Waugh, Defense Threat Reduction Agency (United States)
Session Chairs
Signal, Image, and Data Processing Plenary Session Khan M. Iftekharuddin, Old Dominion University (United States)
1 Signal Processing Oliver E. Drummond, Consulting Engineer (United States) Larry B. Stotts, Stotts Consulting, LLC (United States) 2 Tracking: Association and Filtering Oliver E. Drummond, Consulting Engineer (United States) Eric Hallenborg, Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific (United States) 3 Signal and Data Processing Issues Oliver E. Drummond, Consulting Engineer (United States) Eric Hallenborg, Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific (United States) 4 Workshop: Signal and Track Processing Oliver E. Drummond, Consulting Engineer (United States) Eric Hallenborg, Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific (United States)
Workshop Topic: Signal and Data ProcessingPresentation Titles: Action windows with resource limits and Implementation and evaluation of a detector of clutter embedded resolved targets in optical and infrared maritime video This Series of Conferences Has Added A Daytime Workshop. The conference proceedings and the SPIE Digital Library will use a copy of each author’s PowerPoint file instead of a manuscript. Workshop I: Action Windows with Resource LimitsDavid D. Sworder1 and John E. Boyd2 1University of California, San Diego 2Cubic Global Defense Applications, Inc. Workshop II: Implementation and evaluation of a detector of resolved targets in cluttered optical/infrared maritime videoMartin Jaszewski*, Eric Hallenborg*, and Peh Chin Hwee** *Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific, San Diego, USA **ST Dynamics Pte Ltd., Singapore, Republic of Singapore Test statistic images have been normalized for viewing purposes. The pixel intensity values represent the relative confidence that the pixel contains anomalies (targets). Darker values represent relatively higher confidence that an anomaly is present. Test statistic images have been normalized for viewing purposes. The pixel intensity values represent the relative confidence that the pixel contains anomalies (targets). Darker values represent relatively higher confidence that an anomaly is present. Test statistic images have been normalized for viewing purposes. The pixel intensity values represent the relative confidence that the pixel contains anomalies (targets). Darker values represent relatively higher confidence that an anomaly is present. Test statistic images have been normalized for viewing purposes. The pixel intensity values represent the relative confidence that the pixel contains anomalies (targets). Darker values represent relatively higher confidence that an anomaly is present. Test statistic images have been normalized for viewing purposes. The pixel intensity values represent the relative confidence that the pixel contains anomalies (targets). Darker values represent relatively higher confidence that an anomaly is present. Test statistic images have been normalized for viewing purposes. The pixel intensity values represent the relative confidence that the pixel contains anomalies (targets). Darker values represent relatively higher confidence that an anomaly is present. Test statistic images have been normalized for viewing purposes. The pixel intensity values represent the relative confidence that the pixel contains anomalies (targets). Darker values represent relatively higher confidence that an anomaly is present. Test statistic images have been normalized for viewing purposes. The pixel intensity values represent the relative confidence that the pixel contains anomalies (targets). Darker values represent relatively higher confidence that an anomaly is present. Test statistic images have been normalized for viewing purposes. The pixel intensity values represent the relative confidence that the pixel contains anomalies (targets). Darker values represent relatively higher confidence that an anomaly is present. Test statistic images have been normalized for viewing purposes. The pixel intensity values represent the relative confidence that the pixel contains anomalies (targets). Darker values represent relatively higher confidence that an anomaly is present.
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