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Established and
supported under the Australian Government's Cooperative Research Centres Program

Sensor Signal Processing Program

Program Leader: Professor Doug Gray

The Sensor Signal Processing Program researches the use of statistical signal processing to extract useful information for the detection, characterisation and recognition of objects in noisy environments. Three major areas of statistical signal processing: statistical detection and estimation theory; adaptive-signal processing; and classification theory are used in CSSIP’s research. These techniques have been applied to the solution of real-world problems and data in close collaboration with end users.

The Program comprises projects researching the processing of radar signals in the defence, civil aviation and remote sensing industries, the application of classification techniques in forensic science and the rejection of interference affecting Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers. This wide variety of applications utilises common underlying signal processing techniques.

Microwave Radar plays a prominent role in CSSIP’s research, particularly for Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) and Inverse Synthetic Aperture Radar (ISAR), and, with the increasing availability of repeat pass satellite data research into multi-pass SAR processing is now part of CSSIP’s research program.

GPS is now widely used and the removal of interference is important in safety critical areas that rely on GPS. CSSIP has developed a system implementing space-time adaptive processing to reject interference.

Signal Classification: accompanying the increased use of sensor systems for the detection of signals is the requirement for the classification of such signals. Adding this capability to radars has many important surveillance applications and CSSIP has developed a practical classification system for maritime surveillance radars that is potentially useful in busy harbour environments. Airborne ISAR also offers opportunities for applying classification techniques. Techniques for identifying scratches for matching bullets have been developed for forensic applications.

Data Fusion: There are numerous practical and theoretical problems in fusing information from different types of sensors and from distributed sensors. CSSIP is developing fusion techniques for radar and infrared sensors and an extensive database for Research and Development use.

The SSP group maintain their own homepage which is available here.

For further details please contact

Mr Geoff Vaughan-Evans
Centre Manager
CSSIP
Building P, Mawson Lakes Campus
University of South Australia
MAWSON LAKES
SA 5095 Australia

Phone: +61 8 8302 3923
Fax: +61 8 8302 5301
Email: gve@cssip.edu.au

or

Professor Doug Gray
Deputy CEO
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
University of Adelaide
North Terrace
ADELAIDE
SA 5005

Phone: +61 8 8303 6425
Fax: +61 8 8303 4360
Email: dgray@eleceng.adelaide.edu.au


This page was last updated on: July 10, 2006 10:07
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