Remote Sensing (Oct 2024)
Marine Radar Constant False Alarm Rate Detection in Generalized Extreme Value Distribution Based on Space-Time Adaptive Filtering Clutter Statistical Analysis
Abstract
The performance of marine radar constant false alarm rate (CFAR) detection method is significantly influenced by the modeling of sea clutter distribution and detector decision rules. The false alarm rate and detection rate are therefore unstable. In order to address low CFAR detection performance and the modeling problem of non-uniform, non-Gaussian, and non-stationary sea clutter distribution in marine radar images, in this paper, a CFAR detection method in generalized extreme value distribution modeling based on marine radar space-time filtering background clutter is proposed. Initially, three-dimensional (3D) frequency wave-number (space-time) domain adaptive filter is employed to filter the original radar image, so as to obtain uniform and stable background clutter. Subsequently, generalized extreme value (GEV) distribution is introduced to integrally model the filtered background clutter. Finally, Inclusion/Exclusion (IE) with the best performance under the GEV distribution is selected as the clutter range profile CFAR (CRP-CFAR) detector decision rule in the final detection. The proposed method is verified by utilizing real marine radar image data. The results indicate that when the Pfa is set at 0.0001, the proposed method exhibits an average improvement in PD of 2.3% compared to STAF-RCBD-CFAR, and a 6.2% improvement compared to STCS-WL-CFAR. When the Pfa is set at 0.001, the proposed method exhibits an average improvement in PD of 6.9% compared to STAF-RCBD-CFAR, and a 9.6% improvement compared to STCS-WL-CFAR.
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