13,041 research outputs found
Optimized kernel minimum noise fraction transformation for hyperspectral image classification
This paper presents an optimized kernel minimum noise fraction transformation (OKMNF) for feature extraction of hyperspectral imagery. The proposed approach is based on the kernel minimum noise fraction (KMNF) transformation, which is a nonlinear dimensionality reduction method. KMNF can map the original data into a higher dimensional feature space and provide a small number of quality features for classification and some other post processing. Noise estimation is an important component in KMNF. It is often estimated based on a strong relationship between adjacent pixels. However, hyperspectral images have limited spatial resolution and usually have a large number of mixed pixels, which make the spatial information less reliable for noise estimation. It is the main reason that KMNF generally shows unstable performance in feature extraction for classification. To overcome this problem, this paper exploits the use of a more accurate noise estimation method to improve KMNF. We propose two new noise estimation methods accurately. Moreover, we also propose a framework to improve noise estimation, where both spectral and spatial de-correlation are exploited. Experimental results, conducted using a variety of hyperspectral images, indicate that the proposed OKMNF is superior to some other related dimensionality reduction methods in most cases. Compared to the conventional KMNF, the proposed OKMNF benefits significant improvements in overall classification accuracy
Fundamental remote sensing science research program. Part 1: Status report of the mathematical pattern recognition and image analysis project
The Mathematical Pattern Recognition and Image Analysis (MPRIA) Project is concerned with basic research problems related to the study of the Earth from remotely sensed measurement of its surface characteristics. The program goal is to better understand how to analyze the digital image that represents the spatial, spectral, and temporal arrangement of these measurements for purposing of making selected inference about the Earth
Computationally Efficient Target Classification in Multispectral Image Data with Deep Neural Networks
Detecting and classifying targets in video streams from surveillance cameras
is a cumbersome, error-prone and expensive task. Often, the incurred costs are
prohibitive for real-time monitoring. This leads to data being stored locally
or transmitted to a central storage site for post-incident examination. The
required communication links and archiving of the video data are still
expensive and this setup excludes preemptive actions to respond to imminent
threats. An effective way to overcome these limitations is to build a smart
camera that transmits alerts when relevant video sequences are detected. Deep
neural networks (DNNs) have come to outperform humans in visual classifications
tasks. The concept of DNNs and Convolutional Networks (ConvNets) can easily be
extended to make use of higher-dimensional input data such as multispectral
data. We explore this opportunity in terms of achievable accuracy and required
computational effort. To analyze the precision of DNNs for scene labeling in an
urban surveillance scenario we have created a dataset with 8 classes obtained
in a field experiment. We combine an RGB camera with a 25-channel VIS-NIR
snapshot sensor to assess the potential of multispectral image data for target
classification. We evaluate several new DNNs, showing that the spectral
information fused together with the RGB frames can be used to improve the
accuracy of the system or to achieve similar accuracy with a 3x smaller
computation effort. We achieve a very high per-pixel accuracy of 99.1%. Even
for scarcely occurring, but particularly interesting classes, such as cars, 75%
of the pixels are labeled correctly with errors occurring only around the
border of the objects. This high accuracy was obtained with a training set of
only 30 labeled images, paving the way for fast adaptation to various
application scenarios.Comment: Presented at SPIE Security + Defence 2016 Proc. SPIE 9997, Target and
Background Signatures I
Guided patch-wise nonlocal SAR despeckling
We propose a new method for SAR image despeckling which leverages information
drawn from co-registered optical imagery. Filtering is performed by plain
patch-wise nonlocal means, operating exclusively on SAR data. However, the
filtering weights are computed by taking into account also the optical guide,
which is much cleaner than the SAR data, and hence more discriminative. To
avoid injecting optical-domain information into the filtered image, a
SAR-domain statistical test is preliminarily performed to reject right away any
risky predictor. Experiments on two SAR-optical datasets prove the proposed
method to suppress very effectively the speckle, preserving structural details,
and without introducing visible filtering artifacts. Overall, the proposed
method compares favourably with all state-of-the-art despeckling filters, and
also with our own previous optical-guided filter
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