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Object detection using Gabor filters

  • Michigan State University
  • University of Michigan, Dearborn

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

269 Scopus citations

Abstract

This paper pertains to the detection of objects located in complex backgrounds. A feature-based segmentation approach to the object detection problem is pursued, where the features are computed over multiple spatial orientations and frequencies. The method proceeds as follows: a given image is passed through a bank of even-symmetric Gabor filters. A selection of these filtered images is made and each (selected) filtered image is subjected to a nonlinear (sigmoidal like) transformation. Then, a measure of texture energy is computed in a window around each transformed image pixel. The texture energy ("Gabor features") and their spatial locations are inputted to a squared-error clustering algorithm. This clustering algorithm yields a segmentation of the original image - it assigns to each pixel in the image a cluster label that identifies the amount of mean local energy the pixel possesses across different spatial orientations and frequencies. The method is applied to a number of visual and infrared images, each one of which contains one or more objects. The region corresponding to the object is usually segmented correctly, and a unique signature of "Gabor features" is typically associated with the segment containing the object(s) of interest. Experimental results are provided to illustrate the usefulness of this object detection method in a number of problem domains. These problems arise in IVHS, military reconnaissance, fingerprint analysis, and image database query.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)295-309
Number of pages15
JournalPattern Recognition
Volume30
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 1997

Keywords

  • Even-symmetric Gabor filters
  • Fingerprint
  • Object detection
  • Target recognition
  • Texture-based segmentation

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