TY - JOUR
T1 - Target Detection via Cognitive Radars Using Change-Point Detection, Learning, and Adaptation
AU - Xiang, Yijian
AU - Akcakaya, Murat
AU - Sen, Satyabrata
AU - Nehorai, Arye
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2021/1
Y1 - 2021/1
N2 - Many radar detection algorithms that assume a stationary environment (clutter) have been proposed and analyzed over the years. However, in practice, changes in the nonstationary environment can perturb the parameters of the clutter distribution, or even alter the clutter distribution family, which can greatly deteriorate the target detection capability. To avoid such potential performance degradation, cognitive radar systems are envisioned which are required to rapidly realize the nonstationarity, accurately learn the new characteristics of the environments, and adaptively update the detector. In this paper, aiming to develop a fully cognitive radar for target detection in nonstationary environments, we propose a unifying framework that integrates (i) change-point detection of clutter distributions by using a data-driven cumulative sum (CUSUM) algorithm and its extended version, (ii) learning/identification of clutter distribution by applying sparse theory and kernel density estimation methods, and (iii) adaptive target detection by automatically modifying the likelihood-ratio test and corresponding detection threshold. Further, with extensive numerical examples, we demonstrate the achieved improvements in detection performance due to the proposed framework in comparison with a nonadaptive case, an adaptive matched filter method, and the clairvoyant case. We also use Wilcoxon rank-sum tests to evaluate the statistical significance of the performance improvements.
AB - Many radar detection algorithms that assume a stationary environment (clutter) have been proposed and analyzed over the years. However, in practice, changes in the nonstationary environment can perturb the parameters of the clutter distribution, or even alter the clutter distribution family, which can greatly deteriorate the target detection capability. To avoid such potential performance degradation, cognitive radar systems are envisioned which are required to rapidly realize the nonstationarity, accurately learn the new characteristics of the environments, and adaptively update the detector. In this paper, aiming to develop a fully cognitive radar for target detection in nonstationary environments, we propose a unifying framework that integrates (i) change-point detection of clutter distributions by using a data-driven cumulative sum (CUSUM) algorithm and its extended version, (ii) learning/identification of clutter distribution by applying sparse theory and kernel density estimation methods, and (iii) adaptive target detection by automatically modifying the likelihood-ratio test and corresponding detection threshold. Further, with extensive numerical examples, we demonstrate the achieved improvements in detection performance due to the proposed framework in comparison with a nonadaptive case, an adaptive matched filter method, and the clairvoyant case. We also use Wilcoxon rank-sum tests to evaluate the statistical significance of the performance improvements.
KW - Adaptive target detection
KW - Change-point detection
KW - Clutter distribution identification
KW - Cognitive radar
KW - Nonstationary environments
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85086400310
U2 - 10.1007/s00034-020-01465-z
DO - 10.1007/s00034-020-01465-z
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85086400310
SN - 0278-081X
VL - 40
SP - 233
EP - 261
JO - Circuits, Systems, and Signal Processing
JF - Circuits, Systems, and Signal Processing
IS - 1
ER -