Adaptive Data Transport Mechanism for UAV Surveillance Missions in Lossy Environments
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) play an increasingly critical role in Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) missions such as border patrolling and criminal detection, thanks to their ability to access remote areas and transmit real-time imagery to processing servers. However, UAVs are...
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Zusammenfassung: | Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) play an increasingly critical role in
Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) missions such as border
patrolling and criminal detection, thanks to their ability to access remote
areas and transmit real-time imagery to processing servers. However, UAVs are
highly constrained by payload size, power limits, and communication bandwidth,
necessitating the development of highly selective and efficient data
transmission strategies. This has driven the development of various compression
and optimal transmission technologies for UAVs. Nevertheless, most methods
strive to preserve maximal information in transferred video frames, missing the
fact that only certain parts of images/video frames might offer meaningful
contributions to the ultimate mission objectives in the ISR scenarios involving
moving object detection and tracking (OD/OT). This paper adopts a different
perspective, and offers an alternative AI-driven scheduling policy that
prioritizes selecting regions of the image that significantly contributes to
the mission objective. The key idea is tiling the image into small patches and
developing a deep reinforcement learning (DRL) framework that assigns higher
transmission probabilities to patches that present higher overlaps with the
detected object of interest, while penalizing sharp transitions over
consecutive frames to promote smooth scheduling shifts. Although we used
Yolov-8 object detection and UDP transmission protocols as a benchmark testing
scenario the idea is general and applicable to different transmission protocols
and OD/OT methods. To further boost the system's performance and avoid OD
errors for cluttered image patches, we integrate it with interframe
interpolations. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.10843 |