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18 September 2001Wide-baseline synthetic stereo imagery for human expert training
Wide-baseline three-dimensional, stereoscopic imaging is being investigated at ARL as an aid to the separation of targets from clutter during operator-assisted target acquisition. Preliminary experimental results at ARL [1] indicate that false alarms are decreased and the probability of detection is increased. In this paper we will present a program to produce both infrared and visible band synthetic stereoscopic imagery as well as a methodology to evaluate its usefulness for target detection and clutter rejection. Preliminary images are presented, and qualitatively examined and evaluated.
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Bruce A. Weber, Joseph A. Penn, "Wide-baseline synthetic stereo imagery for human expert training," Proc. SPIE 4370, Targets and Backgrounds VII: Characterization and Representation, (18 September 2001); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.440081