scholarly journals JL-GFDN: A Novel Gabor Filter-Based Deep Network Using Joint Spectral-Spatial Local Binary Pattern for Hyperspectral Image Classification

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (12) ◽  
pp. 2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tao Zhang ◽  
Puzhao Zhang ◽  
Weilin Zhong ◽  
Zhen Yang ◽  
Fan Yang

The traditional local binary pattern (LBP, hereinafter we also call it a two-dimensional local binary pattern 2D-LBP) is unable to depict the spectral characteristics of a hyperspectral image (HSI). To cure this deficiency, this paper develops a joint spectral-spatial 2D-LBP feature (J2D-LBP) by averaging three different 2D-LBP features in a three-dimensional hyperspectral data cube. Subsequently, J2D-LBP is added into the Gabor filter-based deep network (GFDN), and then a novel classification method JL-GFDN is proposed. Different from the original GFDN framework, JL-GFDN further fuses the spectral and spatial features together for HSI classification. Three real data sets are adopted to evaluate the effectiveness of JL-GFDN, and the experimental results verify that (i) JL-GFDN has a better classification accuracy than the original GFDN; (ii) J2D-LBP is more effective in HSI classification in comparison with the traditional 2D-LBP.

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taner Ince ◽  
Tugcan Dundar ◽  
Seydi Kacmaz ◽  
Hasari Karci

We propose a superpixel weighted low-rank and sparse unmixing (SWLRSU) method for sparse unmixing. The proposed method consists of two steps. In the first step, we segment hyperspectral image into superpixels which are defined as the homogeneous regions with different shape and sizes according to the spatial structure. Then, an efficient method is proposed to obtain a spatial weight term using superpixels to capture the spatial structure of hyperspectral data. In the second step, we solve a superpixel guided low-rank and spatially weighted sparse approximation problem in which spatial weight term obtained in the first step is used as a weight term in sparsity promoting norm. This formulation exploits the spatial correlation of the pixels in the hyperspectral image efficiently, which yields satisfactory unmixing results. The experiments are conducted on simulated and real data sets to show the effectiveness of the proposed method.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taner Ince ◽  
Tugcan Dundar ◽  
Seydi Kacmaz ◽  
Hasari Karci

We propose a superpixel weighted low-rank and sparse unmixing (SWLRSU) method for sparse unmixing. The proposed method consists of two steps. In the first step, we segment hyperspectral image into superpixels which are defined as the homogeneous regions with different shape and sizes according to the spatial structure. Then, an efficient method is proposed to obtain a spatial weight term using superpixels to capture the spatial structure of hyperspectral data. In the second step, we solve a superpixel guided low-rank and spatially weighted sparse approximation problem in which spatial weight term obtained in the first step is used as a weight term in sparsity promoting norm. This formulation exploits the spatial correlation of the pixels in the hyperspectral image efficiently, which yields satisfactory unmixing results. The experiments are conducted on simulated and real data sets to show the effectiveness of the proposed method.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. 1693
Author(s):  
Anushree Badola ◽  
Santosh K. Panda ◽  
Dar A. Roberts ◽  
Christine F. Waigl ◽  
Uma S. Bhatt ◽  
...  

Alaska has witnessed a significant increase in wildfire events in recent decades that have been linked to drier and warmer summers. Forest fuel maps play a vital role in wildfire management and risk assessment. Freely available multispectral datasets are widely used for land use and land cover mapping, but they have limited utility for fuel mapping due to their coarse spectral resolution. Hyperspectral datasets have a high spectral resolution, ideal for detailed fuel mapping, but they are limited and expensive to acquire. This study simulates hyperspectral data from Sentinel-2 multispectral data using the spectral response function of the Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer-Next Generation (AVIRIS-NG) sensor, and normalized ground spectra of gravel, birch, and spruce. We used the Uniform Pattern Decomposition Method (UPDM) for spectral unmixing, which is a sensor-independent method, where each pixel is expressed as the linear sum of standard reference spectra. The simulated hyperspectral data have spectral characteristics of AVIRIS-NG and the reflectance properties of Sentinel-2 data. We validated the simulated spectra by visually and statistically comparing it with real AVIRIS-NG data. We observed a high correlation between the spectra of tree classes collected from AVIRIS-NG and simulated hyperspectral data. Upon performing species level classification, we achieved a classification accuracy of 89% for the simulated hyperspectral data, which is better than the accuracy of Sentinel-2 data (77.8%). We generated a fuel map from the simulated hyperspectral image using the Random Forest classifier. Our study demonstrated that low-cost and high-quality hyperspectral data can be generated from Sentinel-2 data using UPDM for improved land cover and vegetation mapping in the boreal forest.


Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (11) ◽  
pp. 3949 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Li ◽  
Mingli Dong ◽  
Naiguang Lu ◽  
Xiaoping Lou ◽  
Peng Sun

An extended robot–world and hand–eye calibration method is proposed in this paper to evaluate the transformation relationship between the camera and robot device. This approach could be performed for mobile or medical robotics applications, where precise, expensive, or unsterile calibration objects, or enough movement space, cannot be made available at the work site. Firstly, a mathematical model is established to formulate the robot-gripper-to-camera rigid transformation and robot-base-to-world rigid transformation using the Kronecker product. Subsequently, a sparse bundle adjustment is introduced for the optimization of robot–world and hand–eye calibration, as well as reconstruction results. Finally, a validation experiment including two kinds of real data sets is designed to demonstrate the effectiveness and accuracy of the proposed approach. The translation relative error of rigid transformation is less than 8/10,000 by a Denso robot in a movement range of 1.3 m × 1.3 m × 1.2 m. The distance measurement mean error after three-dimensional reconstruction is 0.13 mm.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiangyu Song ◽  
Sunil Aryal ◽  
Kai Ming Ting ◽  
zhen Liu ◽  
Bin He

Anomaly detection in hyperspectral image is affected by redundant bands and the limited utilization capacity of spectral-spatial information. In this article, we propose a novel Improved Isolation Forest (IIF) algorithm based on the assumption that anomaly pixels are more susceptible to isolation than the background pixels. The proposed IIF is a modified version of the Isolation Forest (iForest) algorithm, which addresses the poor performance of iForest in detecting local anomalies and anomaly detection in high-dimensional data. Further, we propose a spectral-spatial anomaly detector based on IIF (SSIIFD) to make full use of global and local information, as well as spectral and spatial information. To be specific, first, we apply the Gabor filter to extract spatial features, which are then employed as input to the Relative Mass Isolation Forest (ReMass-iForest) detector to obtain the spatial anomaly score. Next, original images are divided into several homogeneous regions via the Entropy Rate Segmentation (ERS) algorithm, and the preprocessed images are then employed as input to the proposed IIF detector to obtain the spectral anomaly score. Finally, we fuse the spatial and spectral anomaly scores by combining them linearly to predict anomaly pixels. The experimental results on four real hyperspectral data sets demonstrate that the proposed detector outperforms other state-of-the-art methods.


2009 ◽  
Vol 2009 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mahendran Shitan ◽  
Shelton Peiris

Spatial modelling has its applications in many fields like geology, agriculture, meteorology, geography, and so forth. In time series a class of models known as Generalised Autoregressive (GAR) has been introduced by Peiris (2003) that includes an index parameterδ. It has been shown that the inclusion of this additional parameter aids in modelling and forecasting many real data sets. This paper studies the properties of a new class of spatial autoregressive process of order 1 with an index. We will call this aGeneralised Separable Spatial Autoregressive(GENSSAR) Model. The spectral density function (SDF), the autocovariance function (ACVF), and the autocorrelation function (ACF) are derived. The theoretical ACF and SDF plots are presented as three-dimensional figures.


2021 ◽  
Vol 87 (6) ◽  
pp. 445-455
Author(s):  
Yi Ma ◽  
Zezhong Zheng ◽  
Yutang Ma ◽  
Mingcang Zhu ◽  
Ran Huang ◽  
...  

Many manifold learning algorithms conduct an eigen vector analysis on a data-similarity matrix with a size of N×N, where N is the number of data points. Thus, the memory complexity of the analysis is no less than O(N2). We pres- ent in this article an incremental manifold learning approach to handle large hyperspectral data sets for land use identification. In our method, the number of dimensions for the high-dimensional hyperspectral-image data set is obtained with the training data set. A local curvature varia- tion algorithm is utilized to sample a subset of data points as landmarks. Then a manifold skeleton is identified based on the landmarks. Our method is validated on three AVIRIS hyperspectral data sets, outperforming the comparison algorithms with a k–nearest-neighbor classifier and achieving the second best performance with support vector machine.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 1114
Author(s):  
Sixiu Hu ◽  
Jiangtao Peng ◽  
Yingxiong Fu ◽  
Luoqing Li

By means of joint sparse representation (JSR) and kernel representation, kernel joint sparse representation (KJSR) models can effectively model the intrinsic nonlinear relations of hyperspectral data and better exploit spatial neighborhood structure to improve the classification performance of hyperspectral images. However, due to the presence of noisy or inhomogeneous pixels around the central testing pixel in the spatial domain, the performance of KJSR is greatly affected. Motivated by the idea of self-paced learning (SPL), this paper proposes a self-paced KJSR (SPKJSR) model to adaptively learn weights and sparse coefficient vectors for different neighboring pixels in the kernel-based feature space. SPL strateges can learn a weight to indicate the difficulty of feature pixels within a spatial neighborhood. By assigning small weights for unimportant or complex pixels, the negative effect of inhomogeneous or noisy neighboring pixels can be suppressed. Hence, SPKJSR is usually much more robust. Experimental results on Indian Pines and Salinas hyperspectral data sets demonstrate that SPKJSR is much more effective than traditional JSR and KJSR models.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nasehe Jamshidpour ◽  
Abdolreza Safari ◽  
Saeid Homayouni

This paper introduces a novel multi-view multi-learner (MVML) active learning method, in which the different views are generated by a genetic algorithm (GA). The GA-based view generation method attempts to construct diverse, sufficient, and independent views by considering both inter- and intra-view confidences. Hyperspectral data inherently owns high dimensionality, which makes it suitable for multi-view learning algorithms. Furthermore, by employing multiple learners at each view, a more accurate estimation of the underlying data distribution can be obtained. We also implemented a spectral-spatial graph-based semi-supervised learning (SSL) method as the classifier, which improved the performance of the classification task in comparison with supervised learning. The evaluation of the proposed method was based on three different benchmark hyperspectral data sets. The results were also compared with other state-of-the-art AL-SSL methods. The experimental results demonstrated the efficiency and statistically significant superiority of the proposed method. The GA-MVML AL method improved the classification performances by 16.68%, 18.37%, and 15.1% for different data sets after 40 iterations.


2010 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Tamás

Nowadays airborne remote sensing data are increasingly used in precision agriculture. The fast space-time dependent localization of stresses in orchards, which allows for a more efficient application of horticultural technologies, could lead to improved sustainable precise management. The disadvantage of the near field multi and hyper spectroscopy is the spot sample taking, which can apply independently only for experimental survey in plantations. The traditional satellite images is optionally suitable for precision investigation because of the low spectral and ground resolution on field condition. The presented airborne hyperspectral image spectroscopy reduces above mentioned disadvantages and at the same time provides newer analyzing possibility to the user. In this paper we demonstrate the conditions of data base collection and some informative examination possibility. The estimating of the board band vegetation indices calculated from reflectance is well known in practice of the biomass stress examinations. In this method the N-dimension spectral data cube enables to calculate numerous special narrow band indexes and to evaluate maps. This paper aims at investigating the applied hyperspectral analysis for fruit tree stress detection. In our study, hyperspectral data were collected by an AISADUAL hyperspectral image spectroscopy system, with high (0,5-1,5 m) ground resolution. The research focused on determining of leaves condition in different fruit plantations in the peach orchard near Siófok. Moreover the spectral reflectance analyses could provide more information about plant condition due to changes in the absorption of incident light in the visible and near infrared range of the spectrum.


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