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Few-Shot Class-Incremental SAR Target Recognition via Cosine Prototype Learning | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore
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Few-Shot Class-Incremental SAR Target Recognition via Cosine Prototype Learning


Abstract:

Recent years have witnessed a remarkable breakthrough in synthetic aperture radar automatic target recognition (SAR ATR) with the development of deep learning (DL). Nonet...Show More

Abstract:

Recent years have witnessed a remarkable breakthrough in synthetic aperture radar automatic target recognition (SAR ATR) with the development of deep learning (DL). Nonetheless, once deployed, the DL-based methods’ ability to incrementally learn new knowledge from few-shot samples without forgetting the old is fragile, hindering them from discriminating unseen targets in real-world situations. In this article, we propose a cosine prototype learning (CPL) framework to first unlock few-shot class-incremental learning (FSCIL) in the SAR ATR field inspired by the intrinsic relationships between target azimuth-aware knowledge and semantic features under the cosine criterion. By condensing class-specific characteristics into individual prototypes, stable profiles of targets are depicted without losing generalization. For the model’s plasticity, a pairwise structure separation (PSS) loss is introduced to separate old and new classes and compact intraclass features. Meanwhile, the model’s transferability on new classes is guaranteed by a prototype consistency (PC) loss. For the model’s stability, we propose a prototype–exemplar distillation (PED) loss and a prototype recalibration (PR) strategy to penalize semantic drifts of old-class feature spaces and alleviate the misalignment of the learned prototypes successively. At inference, a nearest-class-mean (NCM) classifier is adopted for evaluation by comparing cosine similarity scores between testing samples and class-specific prototypes. In experiments, the proposed components of our method are explored by ablation studies. Strong baselines are established, and extensive experiments conducted on the moving and stationary target acquisition and recognition (MSTAR) dataset show that our method outperforms state-of-the-art methods under various FSCIL conditions, verifying its effectiveness for the FSCIL of SAR ATR.
Article Sequence Number: 5212718
Date of Publication: 24 July 2023

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