Abstract

In the maritime environment, particularly within tidal flats, the frequent occurrence of sea fog significantly impairs the quality of images captured by unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). This degradation manifests as a loss of detail, diminished contrast, and altered color profiles, which directly impact the accuracy and effectiveness of the monitoring data and result in delays in the execution and response speed of monitoring tasks. Traditional physics-based dehazing algorithms have limitations in terms of detail recovery and color restoration, while neural network algorithms are limited in their real-time application on devices with constrained resources due to their model size. To address the above challenges, in the following study, an advanced dehazing algorithm specifically designed for images captured by UAVs over tidal flats is introduced. The algorithm integrates dense convolutional blocks to enhance feature propagation while significantly reducing the number of network parameters, thereby improving the timeliness of the dehazing process. Additionally, an attention mechanism is introduced to assign variable weights to individual channels and pixels, enhancing the network’s ability to perform detail processing. Furthermore, inspired by contrastive learning, the algorithm employs a hybrid loss function that combines mean squared error loss with contrastive regularization. This function plays a crucial role in enhancing the contrast and color saturation of the dehazed images. Our experimental results indicate that, compared to existing methods, the proposed algorithm has a model parameter size of only 0.005 M and a latency of 0.523 ms. When applied to the real tidal flat image dataset, the algorithm achieved a peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) improvement of 2.75 and a mean squared error (MSE) reduction of 9.72. During qualitative analysis, the algorithm generated high-quality dehazing results, characterized by a natural enhancement in color saturation and contrast. These findings confirm that the algorithm performs exceptionally well in real-time fog removal from UAV-captured tidal flat images, enabling the effective and timely monitoring of these environments.

Full Text
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