Abstract

Although advanced deep learning techniques have significantly improved SAR ship detection, accurately detecting small ships remains challenging due to their limited size and the few appearance and geometric clues available. In order to solve this problem, we propose several small object detection strategies. The backbone network uses space-to-depth convolution to replace stride and pooling. It reduces information loss during down-sampling. The neck integrates multiple layers of features globally and injects global and local information into different levels. It avoids the inherent information loss of traditional feature pyramid networks and strengthens the information fusion ability without significantly increasing latency. The proposed intersection-of-union considers the center distance and scale of small ships specifically. It reduces the sensitivity of intersection-of-union to positional deviations of small ships, which is helpful for training toward small ships. During training, the smaller the localization loss of small ships, the greater their localization loss gains are. By this, the supervision of small ships is strengthened in the loss function, which can make the losses more biased toward small ships. A series of experiments are conducted on two commonly used datasets, SSDD and SAR-Ship-Dataset. The experimental results show that the proposed method can detect small ships successfully and thus improve the overall performance of detectors.

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