CAS4Drones:
Content‑addressable storage for aerial imagery is a mature topic. We extend it is as a practical lever for turning a high‑volume livestream into a tractable, cost‑aware analytic stream. Replace raw frame retention with a content fingerprinting layer that lets the pipeline treat visually redundant frames as the same “object” for downstream processing, and then use that deduplicated stream to drive importance sampling, selective perception, and observability events. Two technical families make this work in practice: fast perceptual fingerprints for cheap, near‑real‑time deduplication, and richer deep‑feature hashing for semantic deduplication when the scene semantics matter. Both feed the same operational pattern: compute a compact signature per frame, cluster or threshold those signatures to identify repeats, score novelty relative to recent history, and promote only the frames that cross a novelty threshold into expensive perception or archival storage.
The first stage is perceptual hashing because it is cheap, robust to small compression and alignment differences, and easy to index. Perceptual Hashing (pHash): Unlike standard cryptographic hashes (where one pixel change creates a new hash), perceptual hashes like dHash or pHash generate a compact digital fingerprint that remains stable even if the image is slightly rotated, compressed, or shifted. That stability is helpful to a nadir camera on a drone flying straight edges: most consecutive frames will be near‑duplicates and should collapse to the same fingerprint. A simple operational rule is to compute a 64–128 bit pHash per frame and use Hamming distance as the similarity metric. We use clustering thresholds. To identify 'near‑duplicates' (frames with high overlap), systems calculate the Hamming distance between hashes. In practice, we pick a Hamming threshold empirically from a small labeled set of flights; values that work for nadir imagery are typically small (e.g., 2–8 bit differences on a 64‑bit hash) because the viewpoint is stable.
That cheap layer buys us two things. First, it collapses the vast majority of frames along straight edges into a single representative per short interval, which immediately reduces compute and storage cost. Second, it produces a stream of deduplication events—“new fingerprint”, “repeat fingerprint”, “fingerprint expired”—that are perfect observability primitives. Those events are deterministic, small, and easy to correlate with other telemetry (frame index, FlightID, altitude, inferred ground speed). They become the low‑latency signals an agent or rule engine uses to decide whether to run heavier perception.
Semantic sensitivity requires something more. Two frames can be visually similar yet differ in the presence of a new object or a subtle scene change that matters for coverage. Deep hashing or CLIP‑style embeddings is helpful to this case. A practical hybrid pipeline computes both a pHash and a compact deep descriptor per sampled frame. The pHash is used for immediate deduplication and eventing; the deep descriptor is used for semantic clustering and importance scoring on a slower cadence (for example, every N seconds or when a pHash change is observed). Deep descriptors are clustered with density‑aware algorithms such as HDBSCAN so that the system can identify persistent semantic clusters (e.g., “building cluster”, “water cluster”, “open field cluster”) and detect when a frame belongs to a new semantic cluster even if its pHash is close to a previous one.
Operationally, we perform importance sampling with CAS. For each incoming frame compute pHash and a small motion proxy (mean optical flow or translation vector). If the pHash matches the most recent representative within the Hamming threshold and motion is within the expected range for the edge, mark the frame as redundant and emit a low‑priority “repeat” event. If the pHash is new or the motion proxy indicates a directional change, compute the deep descriptor and evaluate a novelty score against a short‑term memory buffer of recent descriptors. The novelty score can be a weighted combination of descriptor distance, motion direction change, and semantic histogram drift. If the novelty score exceeds a configured threshold, promote the frame for full perception (object detection, high‑resolution stitching, Vision‑LLM analysis) and emit a high‑priority “NovelFrame” event into the observability pipeline. The observability agent then correlates that event with other telemetry—dependency calls, inference latencies, catalog insertions—and can trigger verification steps or human review if needed.
The design can be tightened further. First, use a sliding composite window for memory: keep a short, high‑resolution buffer (seconds) for pHash and motion checks and a longer, lower‑resolution buffer (tens of seconds to minutes) for semantic descriptors. This mirrors the composite window idea used in streaming clustering: short windows catch transient noise, long windows capture persistent regimes. Second, make thresholds adaptive: compute baseline Hamming and descriptor distances per flight segment and scale thresholds by a small factor to tolerate environmental variability (lighting, wind). Third, attach deterministic metadata to every CAS event—FlightID, frame index, altitude, estimated ground speed, pHash value, descriptor cluster id—so that downstream agents and auditors can reproduce decisions. Deterministic event generation is essential for verification: the agent’s reasoning can be stochastic, but the underlying CAS events must be reproducible.
CAS events are high-value to observability. They are compact, explainable, and correlate directly with mission semantics: long runs of “repeat” events indicate stable edges; bursts of “NovelFrame” events indicate corners or scene transitions. Those event patterns can be formalized as inflection signatures: a corner is a short burst where pHash churn increases, motion direction changes beyond a threshold, descriptor novelty spikes, and the rate of “NovelFrame” events exceeds a local baseline. An agent can implement a simple rule that requires co‑occurrence of at least two of these signals within a small temporal window to declare a corner, which reduces false positives while preserving recall.
Cost and importance sampling are tightly coupled. Treat the cost of full perception as a budgeted resource and use CAS‑driven novelty scores to allocate it. For example, define a per‑mission budget of heavy inferences (N per flight hour) and spend it on the top‑N novel frames as ranked by the novelty score. Track TCO per square mile and TCO per analytic query as mission metrics and expose them in dashboards; correlate them with corner detection coverage to quantify the trade‑off between cost and mission completeness. Because corners are high‑value for tiling and mosaicking, we can bias the sampling policy to favor frames that are both novel and temporally spaced to maximize geometric coverage.
Evaluation is straightforward. Measure deduplication rate (fraction of frames collapsed by pHash), corner recall (fraction of ground‑truth corners with at least one promoted frame within ±K frames), precision of promoted frames (fraction that are true positives), and cost savings (reduction in heavy inference calls). Use a small labeled corpus of rectangular flights to tune Hamming and novelty thresholds, then validate on held‑out flights with different altitudes and ground textures.
CAS for aerial livestreams is a practical, auditable mechanism for importance sampling. Perceptual hashes provide a cheap, deterministic first pass; deep descriptors provide semantic sensitivity; both feed an observability fabric of structured events that agents use to make selective, cost‑aware decisions. The result is a pipeline that reduces compute and storage, preserves the frames that matter for coverage and corner detection, and produces a transparent evidence trail for verification and cost analysis.