Dynamic Downscaling Segmentation for Noisy, Low-Contrast in Situ Underwater Plankton Images

Finding and segmenting objects in noisy low-contrast in situ underwater plankton images is challenging because of the difficulty of separating potential plankton objects from the complex background and numerous and diverse other particles. In the present study, a dynamic downscaling model was develo...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE access 2020, Vol.8, p.111012-111026
Hauptverfasser: Cheng, Xuemin, Cheng, Kaichang, Bi, Hongsheng
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Finding and segmenting objects in noisy low-contrast in situ underwater plankton images is challenging because of the difficulty of separating potential plankton objects from the complex background and numerous and diverse other particles. In the present study, a dynamic downscaling model was developed to rapidly extract complete and clean regions of interest (ROIs) from images with highly variable content and quality. The original image was downscaled, and dynamic segmentation was performed in a scale pyramid space to ensure the integrity of weak targets based on local two-dimensional (2D) entropy parameters. Subsequently, a series of local thresholds and clustering gradients was examined iteratively for ROI selection. The performance of the local 2D entropy parameters relative to water turbidity (in a scattering medium and with high background noise) and image size was examined. To suppress the background and increase the sharpness of potential targets, a sharpness descriptor and gradient clustering were employed. The method was compared with the currently commonly used local threshold-based Sauvola segmentation using the same set of images. The results showed that the proposed method improves the ROI extraction accuracy and reduces oversegmentation for in situ underwater plankton images. It was concluded that the proposed method is a fast and robust segmentation technique and could facilitate the deployment of in situ plankton imaging systems for process-based research and routine plankton monitoring.
ISSN:2169-3536
2169-3536
DOI:10.1109/ACCESS.2020.3001613