Litcius/Paper detail

Canonical correlation analysis as a feature extraction method to classify active sonar targets with shallow neural networks

Bernice Kubicek, Ananya Sen Gupta, Ivars Kirsteins

2022The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America16 citationsDOI

Abstract

Sonar target recognition remains an active area of research due to the complex entanglement of features from various acoustic scatterers, background clutter, and distortion by waveguide propagation effects. An equally challenging issue is due to different acoustic echoes returned from the target (including different target elements) itself. This work investigates the sonar target classification problem from a statistical perspective and aims to extract salient target feature vectors. Specifically, a multivariate statistical method is employed, canonical correlation analysis (CCA), as a feature extraction technique prior to multi-class classification of active sonar field data. The intuition behind using CCA is that persistent features slowly morph over time due to the changing aspect angles and platform positions and can be represented by maximally correlated projections of consecutive pings. CCA is applied using a sliding window, and the projections are used as feature vectors to train a neural network classifier. The smallest increase in classification accuracy when comparing the projection feature vectors to unprocessed feature vectors was 10%. The largest increase was 34%. The results are further examined through the use of confusion matrices and layer-wise relevance propagation, which distributes the trained networks output score to the input layer.

Topics & Concepts

Marine mammals and sonarPattern recognition (psychology)SonarComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceCanonical correlationClassifier (UML)Artificial neural networkFeature extractionFeature vectorFeature (linguistics)ClutterRadarPhilosophyTelecommunicationsLinguisticsUnderwater Acoustics ResearchMarine animal studies overviewSpeech and Audio Processing