94 research outputs found

    Deep Hashing Based on Class-Discriminated Neighborhood Embedding

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    Deep-hashing methods have drawn significant attention during the past years in the field of remote sensing (RS) owing to their prominent capabilities for capturing the semantics from complex RS scenes and generating the associated hash codes in an end-to-end manner. Most existing deep-hashing methods exploit pairwise and triplet losses to learn the hash codes with the preservation of semantic-similarities which require the construction of image pairs and triplets based on supervised information (e.g., class labels). However, the learned Hamming spaces based on these losses may not be optimal due to an insufficient sampling of image pairs and triplets for scalable RS archives. To solve this limitation, we propose a new deep-hashing technique based on the class-discriminated neighborhood embedding, which can properly capture the locality structures among the RS scenes and distinguish images class-wisely in the Hamming space. An extensive experimentation has been conducted in order to validate the effectiveness of the proposed method by comparing it with several state-of-the-art conventional and deep-hashing methods. The related codes of this article will be made publicly available for reproducible research by the community

    Impact of Feature Representation on Remote Sensing Image Retrieval

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    Remote sensing images are acquired using special platforms, sensors and are classified as aerial, multispectral and hyperspectral images. Multispectral and hyperspectral images are represented using large spectral vectors as compared to normal Red, Green, Blue (RGB) images. Hence, remote sensing image retrieval process from large archives is a challenging task.  Remote sensing image retrieval mainly consist of feature representation as first step and finding out similar images to a query image as second step. Feature representation plays important part in the performance of remote sensing image retrieval process. Research work focuses on impact of feature representation of remote sensing images on the performance of remote sensing image retrieval. This study shows that more discriminative features of remote sensing images are needed to improve performance of remote sensing image retrieval process

    Exploiting Deep Features for Remote Sensing Image Retrieval: A Systematic Investigation

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    Remote sensing (RS) image retrieval is of great significant for geological information mining. Over the past two decades, a large amount of research on this task has been carried out, which mainly focuses on the following three core issues: feature extraction, similarity metric and relevance feedback. Due to the complexity and multiformity of ground objects in high-resolution remote sensing (HRRS) images, there is still room for improvement in the current retrieval approaches. In this paper, we analyze the three core issues of RS image retrieval and provide a comprehensive review on existing methods. Furthermore, for the goal to advance the state-of-the-art in HRRS image retrieval, we focus on the feature extraction issue and delve how to use powerful deep representations to address this task. We conduct systematic investigation on evaluating correlative factors that may affect the performance of deep features. By optimizing each factor, we acquire remarkable retrieval results on publicly available HRRS datasets. Finally, we explain the experimental phenomenon in detail and draw conclusions according to our analysis. Our work can serve as a guiding role for the research of content-based RS image retrieval

    Graph Relation Network: Modeling Relations Between Scenes for Multilabel Remote-Sensing Image Classification and Retrieval

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    Due to the proliferation of large-scale remote-sensing (RS) archives with multiple annotations, multilabel RS scene classification and retrieval are becoming increasingly popular. Although some recent deep learning-based methods are able to achieve promising results in this context, the lack of research on how to learn embedding spaces under the multilabel assumption often makes these models unable to preserve complex semantic relations pervading aerial scenes, which is an important limitation in RS applications. To fill this gap, we propose a new graph relation network (GRN) for multilabel RS scene categorization. Our GRN is able to model the relations between samples (or scenes) by making use of a graph structure which is fed into network learning. For this purpose, we define a new loss function called scalable neighbor discriminative loss with binary cross entropy (SNDL-BCE) that is able to embed the graph structures through the networks more effectively. The proposed approach can guide deep learning techniques (such as convolutional neural networks) to a more discriminative metric space, where semantically similar RS scenes are closely embedded and dissimilar images are separated from a novel multilabel viewpoint. To achieve this goal, our GRN jointly maximizes a weighted leave-one-out K-nearest neighbors (KNN) score in the training set, where the weight matrix describes the contributions of the nearest neighbors associated with each RS image on its class decision, and the likelihood of the class discrimination in the multilabel scenario. An extensive experimental comparison, conducted on three multilabel RS scene data archives, validates the effectiveness of the proposed GRN in terms of KNN classification and image retrieval. The codes of this article will be made publicly available for reproducible research in the community
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