The interpretation of aerial photographs requires a lot of knowledge about the scene under consideration. Knowledge about the type of scene: airport, suburban housing development, urban city, aids in low-level and intermediate level image analysis, and will drive high-level interpretation by constraining search for plausible consistent scene models. Collecting and representing large knowledge bases requires specialized tools. In this paper we describe the organization of a set of tools for interactive knowledge acquisition of scene primitives and spatial constraints for interpretation of aerial imagery. These tools include a user interface for interactive knowledge acquisition, the automated compilation of that knowledge from a schema-based representation into productions that are directly executable by our interpretation system, and a performance analysis tool that generates a critique of the final interpretation. Finally, the generality of these tools is demonstrated by the generation of rules for a new task, suburban house scenes, and the analysis of a set of imagery by our interpretation system.
[1]
Bruce G. Buchanan,et al.
Some approaches to knowledge acquistion
,
1986
.
[2]
Robert Horonjeff,et al.
Planning and design of airports
,
1950
.
[3]
David M. McKeown,et al.
Digital Cartography and Photo Interpretation from a Database Viewpoint
,
1984,
ICOD-2 Workshop on New Applications of Data Bases.
[4]
John P. McDermott,et al.
Making Expert Systems Explicit (Invited Paper)
,
1986,
IFIP Congress.
[5]
David M. McKeown,et al.
Map-guided feature extraction from aerial imagery
,
1984
.
[6]
Shang-Shouq Vincent Hwang,et al.
Evidence accumulation for spatial reasoning in aerial image understanding (expert system, computer vision)
,
1983
.