Multimodal Image Alignment Through a Multiscale Chain of Neural Networks with Application to Remote Sensing

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Abstract

We tackle here the problem of multimodal image non-rigid registration, which is of prime importance in remote sensing and medical imaging. The difficulties encountered by classical registration approaches include feature design and slow optimization by gradient descent. By analyzing these methods, we note the significance of the notion of scale. We design easy-to-train, fully-convolutional neural networks able to learn scale-specific features. Once chained appropriately, they perform global registration in linear time, getting rid of gradient descent schemes by predicting directly the deformation. We show their performance in terms of quality and speed through various tasks of remote sensing multimodal image alignment. In particular, we are able to register correctly cadastral maps of buildings as well as road polylines onto RGB images, and outperform current keypoint matching methods.

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Zampieri, A., Charpiat, G., Girard, N., & Tarabalka, Y. (2018). Multimodal Image Alignment Through a Multiscale Chain of Neural Networks with Application to Remote Sensing. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 11220 LNCS, pp. 679–696). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-01270-0_40

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