838 research outputs found
Graph-based Data Modeling and Analysis for Data Fusion in Remote Sensing
Hyperspectral imaging provides the capability of increased sensitivity and discrimination over traditional imaging methods by combining standard digital imaging with spectroscopic methods. For each individual pixel in a hyperspectral image (HSI), a continuous spectrum is sampled as the spectral reflectance/radiance signature to facilitate identification of ground cover and surface material. The abundant spectrum knowledge allows all available information from the data to be mined. The superior qualities within hyperspectral imaging allow wide applications such as mineral exploration, agriculture monitoring, and ecological surveillance, etc. The processing of massive high-dimensional HSI datasets is a challenge since many data processing techniques have a computational complexity that grows exponentially with the dimension. Besides, a HSI dataset may contain a limited number of degrees of freedom due to the high correlations between data points and among the spectra. On the other hand, merely taking advantage of the sampled spectrum of individual HSI data point may produce inaccurate results due to the mixed nature of raw HSI data, such as mixed pixels, optical interferences and etc.
Fusion strategies are widely adopted in data processing to achieve better performance, especially in the field of classification and clustering. There are mainly three types of fusion strategies, namely low-level data fusion, intermediate-level feature fusion, and high-level decision fusion. Low-level data fusion combines multi-source data that is expected to be complementary or cooperative. Intermediate-level feature fusion aims at selection and combination of features to remove redundant information. Decision level fusion exploits a set of classifiers to provide more accurate results. The fusion strategies have wide applications including HSI data processing. With the fast development of multiple remote sensing modalities, e.g. Very High Resolution (VHR) optical sensors, LiDAR, etc., fusion of multi-source data can in principal produce more detailed information than each single source. On the other hand, besides the abundant spectral information contained in HSI data, features such as texture and shape may be employed to represent data points from a spatial perspective. Furthermore, feature fusion also includes the strategy of removing redundant and noisy features in the dataset.
One of the major problems in machine learning and pattern recognition is to develop appropriate representations for complex nonlinear data. In HSI processing, a particular data point is usually described as a vector with coordinates corresponding to the intensities measured in the spectral bands. This vector representation permits the application of linear and nonlinear transformations with linear algebra to find an alternative representation of the data. More generally, HSI is multi-dimensional in nature and the vector representation may lose the contextual correlations. Tensor representation provides a more sophisticated modeling technique and a higher-order generalization to linear subspace analysis.
In graph theory, data points can be generalized as nodes with connectivities measured from the proximity of a local neighborhood. The graph-based framework efficiently characterizes the relationships among the data and allows for convenient mathematical manipulation in many applications, such as data clustering, feature extraction, feature selection and data alignment. In this thesis, graph-based approaches applied in the field of multi-source feature and data fusion in remote sensing area are explored. We will mainly investigate the fusion of spatial, spectral and LiDAR information with linear and multilinear algebra under graph-based framework for data clustering and classification problems
On the Exploitation of Heterophily in Graph-Based Multimodal Remote Sensing Data Analysis
Source at https://ceur-ws.org/.The field of Earth observation is dealing with increasingly large, multimodal data sets. An important processing step consists
of providing these data sets with labels. However, standard label propagation algorithms cannot be applied to multimodal
remote sensing data for two reasons. First, multimodal data is heterogeneous while classic label propagation algorithms
assume a homogeneous network. Second, real-world data can show both homophily (’birds of a feather flock together’) and
heterophily (’opposites attract’) during propagation, while standard algorithms only consider homophily. Both shortcomings
are addressed in this work and the result is a graph-based label propagation algorithm for multimodal data that includes
homophily and/or heterophily. Furthermore, the method is also able to transfer information between uni- and multimodal
data. Experiments on the remote sensing data set of Houston, which contains a LiDAR and a hyperspectral image, show
that our approach ties state-of-the-art methods for classification with an OA of 91.4%, while being more flexible and not
constrained to a specific data set or a specific combination of modalities
A Comprehensive Survey of Deep Learning in Remote Sensing: Theories, Tools and Challenges for the Community
In recent years, deep learning (DL), a re-branding of neural networks (NNs),
has risen to the top in numerous areas, namely computer vision (CV), speech
recognition, natural language processing, etc. Whereas remote sensing (RS)
possesses a number of unique challenges, primarily related to sensors and
applications, inevitably RS draws from many of the same theories as CV; e.g.,
statistics, fusion, and machine learning, to name a few. This means that the RS
community should be aware of, if not at the leading edge of, of advancements
like DL. Herein, we provide the most comprehensive survey of state-of-the-art
RS DL research. We also review recent new developments in the DL field that can
be used in DL for RS. Namely, we focus on theories, tools and challenges for
the RS community. Specifically, we focus on unsolved challenges and
opportunities as it relates to (i) inadequate data sets, (ii)
human-understandable solutions for modelling physical phenomena, (iii) Big
Data, (iv) non-traditional heterogeneous data sources, (v) DL architectures and
learning algorithms for spectral, spatial and temporal data, (vi) transfer
learning, (vii) an improved theoretical understanding of DL systems, (viii)
high barriers to entry, and (ix) training and optimizing the DL.Comment: 64 pages, 411 references. To appear in Journal of Applied Remote
Sensin
A Multimodal Feature Selection Method for Remote Sensing Data Analysis Based on Double Graph Laplacian Diagonalization
When dealing with multivariate remotely sensed records collected by multiple sensors, an accurate selection of information at the data, feature, or decision level is instrumental in improving the scenes’ characterization. This will also enhance the system’s efficiency and provide more details on modeling the physical phenomena occurring on the Earth’s surface. In this article, we introduce a flexible and efficient method based on graph Laplacians for information selection at different levels of data fusion. The proposed approach combines data structure and information content to address the limitations of existing graph-Laplacian-based methods in dealing with heterogeneous datasets. Moreover, it adapts the selection to each homogenous area of the considered images according to their underlying properties. Experimental tests carried out on several multivariate remote sensing datasets show the consistency of the proposed approach
More Diverse Means Better: Multimodal Deep Learning Meets Remote Sensing Imagery Classification
Classification and identification of the materials lying over or beneath the
Earth's surface have long been a fundamental but challenging research topic in
geoscience and remote sensing (RS) and have garnered a growing concern owing to
the recent advancements of deep learning techniques. Although deep networks
have been successfully applied in single-modality-dominated classification
tasks, yet their performance inevitably meets the bottleneck in complex scenes
that need to be finely classified, due to the limitation of information
diversity. In this work, we provide a baseline solution to the aforementioned
difficulty by developing a general multimodal deep learning (MDL) framework. In
particular, we also investigate a special case of multi-modality learning (MML)
-- cross-modality learning (CML) that exists widely in RS image classification
applications. By focusing on "what", "where", and "how" to fuse, we show
different fusion strategies as well as how to train deep networks and build the
network architecture. Specifically, five fusion architectures are introduced
and developed, further being unified in our MDL framework. More significantly,
our framework is not only limited to pixel-wise classification tasks but also
applicable to spatial information modeling with convolutional neural networks
(CNNs). To validate the effectiveness and superiority of the MDL framework,
extensive experiments related to the settings of MML and CML are conducted on
two different multimodal RS datasets. Furthermore, the codes and datasets will
be available at https://github.com/danfenghong/IEEE_TGRS_MDL-RS, contributing
to the RS community
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