Crack detection using a texture analysis-based technique for visual bridge inspection
Author(s)
Bu, GP
Chanda, S
Guan, H
Jo, J
Blumenstein, M
Loo, YC
Year published
2015
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Bridge inspection is a pathway to bridge condition rating assessment, and is an essential element
of any bridge management system (BMS). The success of a BMS is highly dependent on the quality of
bridge inspection outcomes and accurate estimation of future bridge condition ratings. However, existing visual
bridge inspection methods suffer several limitations due to human subjective judgment. In order to minimise
such limitations, a feasibility study has been performed to enhance the current visual inspection method
using optical image processing techniques. However, the accuracy of the inspection outcomes still requires
further ...
View more >Bridge inspection is a pathway to bridge condition rating assessment, and is an essential element of any bridge management system (BMS). The success of a BMS is highly dependent on the quality of bridge inspection outcomes and accurate estimation of future bridge condition ratings. However, existing visual bridge inspection methods suffer several limitations due to human subjective judgment. In order to minimise such limitations, a feasibility study has been performed to enhance the current visual inspection method using optical image processing techniques. However, the accuracy of the inspection outcomes still requires further improvement. This paper proposes an automatic bridge inspection approach employing wavelet-based image features along with support vector machines (SVM) for automatic detection of cracks in bridge images. A two-stage approach is followed, in the first stage, a decision is made as whether an image should undergo a pre-processing step (depending on image characteristics); in the second stage, wavelet features are extracted from the image using a sliding window texture analysis-based technique. Consequently, an average accuracy of 92% (effect of training image types on accuracy) is obtained even when undertaking experiments with noisy and complex bridge images.
View less >
View more >Bridge inspection is a pathway to bridge condition rating assessment, and is an essential element of any bridge management system (BMS). The success of a BMS is highly dependent on the quality of bridge inspection outcomes and accurate estimation of future bridge condition ratings. However, existing visual bridge inspection methods suffer several limitations due to human subjective judgment. In order to minimise such limitations, a feasibility study has been performed to enhance the current visual inspection method using optical image processing techniques. However, the accuracy of the inspection outcomes still requires further improvement. This paper proposes an automatic bridge inspection approach employing wavelet-based image features along with support vector machines (SVM) for automatic detection of cracks in bridge images. A two-stage approach is followed, in the first stage, a decision is made as whether an image should undergo a pre-processing step (depending on image characteristics); in the second stage, wavelet features are extracted from the image using a sliding window texture analysis-based technique. Consequently, an average accuracy of 92% (effect of training image types on accuracy) is obtained even when undertaking experiments with noisy and complex bridge images.
View less >
Journal Title
Electronic Journal of Structural Engineering
Volume
14
Issue
1
Publisher URI
Subject
Civil engineering
Civil engineering not elsewhere classified