DocumentCode
1967415
Title
A `Microwave Eye´ Can be Almost Human
Author
Anderson, A.P. ; Mawani, S.J.
Author_Institution
Department of Electronic & Electrical Engineering, The University of Sheffield, U.K.
fYear
1976
fDate
14-17 Sept. 1976
Firstpage
105
Lastpage
111
Abstract
Microwave imagery is commonly accepted to have inherently lower resolution than optical systems produce, and small scale microwave imaging systems should be particularly poor in this respect. Since Man is an optical imaging system, and also the ultimate recognition system, it is interesting to compare his performance with a microwave lens system which remotely images suitably reflecting targets. It is shown that the microwave system resolution can be only one order of magnitude inferior to the human eye-brain response. Given that recognition of objects is performed on their low spatial frequency components, the small scale microwave imaging system is comparable to human performance for simple target shapes.
Keywords
Frequency; Humans; Image recognition; Image resolution; Lenses; Microwave imaging; Optical imaging; Shape; Spatial resolution; Target recognition;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Microwave Conference, 1976. 6th European
Conference_Location
Rome, Italy
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/EUMA.1976.332255
Filename
4130921
Link To Document