Abstract

Synthetic aperture radar (SAR) target discrimination is an important stage that distinguishes targets from clutters in the radar automatic target recognition field. However, in complex SAR scenes, the performance of some traditional discriminators will degrade. As an effective tool for one-class classification (OCC), the max-margin one-class classifier has attracted much attention for SAR target discrimination, as it can effectively reduce the impact of multiple clutters. However, the performance of the max-margin one-class classifier is very sensitive to the values of kernel parameters. To solve the problem, this paper proposes an adaptive max-margin one-class classifier for SAR target discrimination in complex scenes. In a max-margin one-class classifier with a suitable kernel parameter, the distance between a sample and classification boundary satisfies a certain geometric relationship, i.e., edge samples in input space are transformed to the region in the kernel space close to boundary, while interior samples in input space are transformed to the region in the kernel space far away from boundary. Therefore, we define the information entropy of samples in the kernel space to measure the distance between samples and classification boundary. To automatically obtain the optimal kernel parameter of the max-margin one-class classifier, the edge and interior samples in the input space are first selected, and then the parameter optimization is performed by minimizing information entropy of interior samples and simultaneously maximizing the information entropy of edge samples. Experimental results of the synthetic datasets and measured synthetic aperture radar (SAR) datasets validate the effectiveness of our method.

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