Post-processing and band selection for hyperspectral image data classification with AdaBoost.MH

Author(s):  
Desta Sandya Prasvita
2004 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 895-907 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. G. Bajwa ◽  
P. Bajcsy ◽  
P. Groves ◽  
L. F. Tian

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (20) ◽  
pp. 4133
Author(s):  
Jakub Nalepa ◽  
Michal Myller ◽  
Lukasz Tulczyjew ◽  
Michal Kawulok

Hyperspectral images capture very detailed information about scanned objects and, hence, can be used to uncover various characteristics of the materials present in the analyzed scene. However, such image data are difficult to transfer due to their large volume, and generating new ground-truth datasets that could be utilized to train supervised learners is costly, time-consuming, very user-dependent, and often infeasible in practice. The research efforts have been focusing on developing algorithms for hyperspectral data classification and unmixing, which are two main tasks in the analysis chain of such imagery. Although in both of them, the deep learning techniques have bloomed as an extremely effective tool, designing the deep models that generalize well over the unseen data is a serious practical challenge in emerging applications. In this paper, we introduce the deep ensembles benefiting from different architectural advances of convolutional base models and suggest a new approach towards aggregating the outputs of base learners using a supervised fuser. Furthermore, we propose a model augmentation technique that allows us to synthesize new deep networks based on the original one by injecting Gaussian noise into the model’s weights. The experiments, performed for both hyperspectral data classification and unmixing, show that our deep ensembles outperform base spectral and spectral-spatial deep models and classical ensembles employing voting and averaging as a fusing scheme in both hyperspectral image analysis tasks.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Jian Zhou ◽  
Zhuping Wang ◽  
Yingjie Jiao ◽  
Cong Nie

Hyperspectral information can be used to express the material properties of objects, which has a strong effect on camouflage recognition. However, it is difficult to process it directly because of the huge hyperspectral image data. Therefore, this paper proposes a new band selection algorithm to achieve band selection by simulating visual perception. The subspace clustering self-attention adversarial network is constructed to realize the initial selection of band. According to the visual chromatic aberration principle, a model is constructed to determine the band that combines the strongest response intensity of a particular material, and then this band is selected as the final band, therefore realizing the algorithm of material demarcation in this way.


2008 ◽  
Vol 22 (9) ◽  
pp. 482-490 ◽  
Author(s):  
Howland D. T. Jones ◽  
David M. Haaland ◽  
Michael B. Sinclair ◽  
David K. Melgaard ◽  
Mark H. Van Benthem ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johannes Jordan ◽  
Elli Angelopoulou ◽  
Andreas Maier

Multispectral and hyperspectral images are well established in various fields of application like remote sensing, astronomy, and microscopic spectroscopy. In recent years, the availability of new sensor designs, more powerful processors, and high-capacity storage further opened this imaging modality to a wider array of applications like medical diagnosis, agriculture, and cultural heritage. This necessitates new tools that allow general analysis of the image data and are intuitive to users who are new to hyperspectral imaging. We introduce a novel framework that bundles new interactive visualization techniques with powerful algorithms and is accessible through an efficient and intuitive graphical user interface. We visualize the spectral distribution of an image via parallel coordinates with a strong link to traditional visualization techniques, enabling new paradigms in hyperspectral image analysis that focus on interactive raw data exploration. We combine novel methods for supervised segmentation, global clustering, and nonlinear false-color coding to assist in the visual inspection. Our framework coined Gerbil is open source and highly modular, building on established methods and being easily extensible for application-specific needs. It satisfies the need for a general, consistent software framework that tightly integrates analysis algorithms with an intuitive, modern interface to the raw image data and algorithmic results. Gerbil finds its worldwide use in academia and industry alike with several thousand downloads originating from 45 countries.


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