933 research outputs found
Spectral Unmixing with Multiple Dictionaries
Spectral unmixing aims at recovering the spectral signatures of materials,
called endmembers, mixed in a hyperspectral or multispectral image, along with
their abundances. A typical assumption is that the image contains one pure
pixel per endmember, in which case spectral unmixing reduces to identifying
these pixels. Many fully automated methods have been proposed in recent years,
but little work has been done to allow users to select areas where pure pixels
are present manually or using a segmentation algorithm. Additionally, in a
non-blind approach, several spectral libraries may be available rather than a
single one, with a fixed number (or an upper or lower bound) of endmembers to
chose from each. In this paper, we propose a multiple-dictionary constrained
low-rank matrix approximation model that address these two problems. We propose
an algorithm to compute this model, dubbed M2PALS, and its performance is
discussed on both synthetic and real hyperspectral images
Dictionary-based Tensor Canonical Polyadic Decomposition
To ensure interpretability of extracted sources in tensor decomposition, we
introduce in this paper a dictionary-based tensor canonical polyadic
decomposition which enforces one factor to belong exactly to a known
dictionary. A new formulation of sparse coding is proposed which enables high
dimensional tensors dictionary-based canonical polyadic decomposition. The
benefits of using a dictionary in tensor decomposition models are explored both
in terms of parameter identifiability and estimation accuracy. Performances of
the proposed algorithms are evaluated on the decomposition of simulated data
and the unmixing of hyperspectral images
Fast and Robust Recursive Algorithms for Separable Nonnegative Matrix Factorization
In this paper, we study the nonnegative matrix factorization problem under
the separability assumption (that is, there exists a cone spanned by a small
subset of the columns of the input nonnegative data matrix containing all
columns), which is equivalent to the hyperspectral unmixing problem under the
linear mixing model and the pure-pixel assumption. We present a family of fast
recursive algorithms, and prove they are robust under any small perturbations
of the input data matrix. This family generalizes several existing
hyperspectral unmixing algorithms and hence provides for the first time a
theoretical justification of their better practical performance.Comment: 30 pages, 2 figures, 7 tables. Main change: Improvement of the bound
of the main theorem (Th. 3), replacing r with sqrt(r
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