86 research outputs found

    A novel band selection and spatial noise reduction method for hyperspectral image classification.

    Get PDF
    As an essential reprocessing method, dimensionality reduction (DR) can reduce the data redundancy and improve the performance of hyperspectral image (HSI) classification. A novel unsupervised DR framework with feature interpretability, which integrates both band selection (BS) and spatial noise reduction method, is proposed to extract low-dimensional spectral-spatial features of HSI. We proposed a new Neighboring band Grouping and Normalized Matching Filter (NGNMF) for BS, which can reduce the data dimension whilst preserve the corresponding spectral information. An enhanced 2-D singular spectrum analysis (E2DSSA) method is also proposed to extract the spatial context and structural information from each selected band, aiming to decrease the intra-class variability and reduce the effect of noise in the spatial domain. The support vector machine (SVM) classifier is used to evaluate the effectiveness of the extracted spectral-spatial low-dimensional features. Experimental results on three publicly available HSI datasets have fully demonstrated the efficacy of the proposed NGNMF-E2DSSA method, which has surpassed a number of state-of-the-art DR methods

    Large kernel spectral and spatial attention networks for hyperspectral image classification.

    Get PDF
    Currently, long-range spectral and spatial dependencies have been widely demonstrated to be essential for hyperspectral image (HSI) classification. Due to the transformer superior ability to exploit long-range representations, the transformer-based methods have exhibited enormous potential. However, existing transformer-based approaches still face two crucial issues that hinder the further performance promotion of HSI classification: 1) treating HSI as 1D sequences neglects spatial properties of HSI, 2) the dependence between spectral and spatial information is not fully considered. To tackle the above problems, a large kernel spectral-spatial attention network (LKSSAN) is proposed to capture the long-range 3D properties of HSI, which is inspired by the visual attention network (VAN). Specifically, a spectral-spatial attention module is first proposed to effectively exploit discriminative 3D spectral-spatial features while keeping the 3D structure of HSI. This module introduces the large kernel attention (LKA) and convolution feed-forward (CFF) to flexibly emphasize, model, and exploit the long-range 3D feature dependencies with lower computational pressure. Finally, the features from the spectral-spatial attention module are fed into the classification module for the optimization of 3D spectral-spatial representation. To verify the effectiveness of the proposed classification method, experiments are executed on four widely used HSI data sets. The experiments demonstrate that LKSSAN is indeed an effective way for long-range 3D feature extraction of HSI

    Bayesian gravitation based classification for hyperspectral images.

    Get PDF
    Integration of spectral and spatial information is extremely important for the classification of high-resolution hyperspectral images (HSIs). Gravitation describes interaction among celestial bodies which can be applied to measure similarity between data for image classification. However, gravitation is hard to combine with spatial information and rarely been applied in HSI classification. This paper proposes a Bayesian Gravitation based Classification (BGC) to integrate the spectral and spatial information of local neighbors and training samples. In the BGC method, each testing pixel is first assumed as a massive object with unit volume and a particular density, where the density is taken as the data mass in BGC. Specifically, the data mass is formulated as an exponential function of the spectral distribution of its neighbors and the spatial prior distribution of its surrounding training samples based on the Bayesian theorem. Then, a joint data gravitation model is developed as the classification measure, in which the data mass is taken to weigh the contribution of different neighbors in a local region. Four benchmark HSI datasets, i.e. the Indian Pines, Pavia University, Salinas, and Grss_dfc_2014, are tested to verify the BGC method. The experimental results are compared with that of several well-known HSI classification methods, including the support vector machines, sparse representation, and other eight state-of-the-art HSI classification methods. The BGC shows apparent superiority in the classification of high-resolution HSIs and also flexibility for HSIs with limited samples

    Superpixel nonlocal weighting joint sparse representation for hyperspectral image classification.

    Get PDF
    Joint sparse representation classification (JSRC) is a representative spectral–spatial classifier for hyperspectral images (HSIs). However, the JSRC is inappropriate for highly heterogeneous areas due to the spatial information being extracted from a fixed-sized neighborhood block, which is often unable to conform to the naturally irregular structure of land cover. To address this problem, a superpixel-based JSRC with nonlocal weighting, i.e., superpixel-based nonlocal weighted JSRC (SNLW-JSRC), is proposed in this paper. In SNLW-JSRC, the superpixel representation of an HSI is first constructed based on an entropy rate segmentation method. This strategy forms homogeneous neighborhoods with naturally irregular structures and alleviates the inclusion of pixels from different classes in the process of spatial information extraction. Afterwards, the superpixel-based nonlocal weighting (SNLW) scheme is built to weigh the superpixel based on its structural and spectral information. In this way, the weight of one specific neighboring pixel is determined by the local structural similarity between the neighboring pixel and the central test pixel. Then, the obtained local weights are used to generate the weighted mean data for each superpixel. Finally, JSRC is used to produce the superpixel-level classification. This speeds up the sparse representation and makes the spatial content more centralized and compact. To verify the proposed SNLW-JSRC method, we conducted experiments on four benchmark hyperspectral datasets, namely Indian Pines, Pavia University, Salinas, and DFC2013. The experimental results suggest that the SNLW-JSRC can achieve better classification results than the other four SRC-based algorithms and the classical support vector machine algorithm. Moreover, the SNLW-JSRC can also outperform the other SRC-based algorithms, even with a small number of training samples

    An interactive image segmentation method in hand gesture recognition

    Get PDF
    In order to improve the recognition rate of hand gestures a new interactive image segmentation method for hand gesture recognition is presented, and popular methods, e.g., Graph cut, Random walker, Interactive image segmentation using geodesic star convexity, are studied in this article. The Gaussian Mixture Model was employed for image modelling and the iteration of Expectation Maximum algorithm learns the parameters of Gaussian Mixture Model. We apply a Gibbs random field to the image segmentation and minimize the Gibbs Energy using Min-cut theorem to find the optimal segmentation. The segmentation result of our method is tested on an image dataset and compared with other methods by estimating the region accuracy and boundary accuracy. Finally five kinds of hand gestures in different backgrounds are tested on our experimental platform, and the sparse representation algorithm is used, proving that the segmentation of hand gesture images helps to improve the recognition accuracy

    Imperceptible Physical Attack against Face Recognition Systems via LED Illumination Modulation

    Full text link
    Although face recognition starts to play an important role in our daily life, we need to pay attention that data-driven face recognition vision systems are vulnerable to adversarial attacks. However, the current two categories of adversarial attacks, namely digital attacks and physical attacks both have drawbacks, with the former ones impractical and the latter one conspicuous, high-computational and inexecutable. To address the issues, we propose a practical, executable, inconspicuous and low computational adversarial attack based on LED illumination modulation. To fool the systems, the proposed attack generates imperceptible luminance changes to human eyes through fast intensity modulation of scene LED illumination and uses the rolling shutter effect of CMOS image sensors in face recognition systems to implant luminance information perturbation to the captured face images. In summary,we present a denial-of-service (DoS) attack for face detection and a dodging attack for face verification. We also evaluate their effectiveness against well-known face detection models, Dlib, MTCNN and RetinaFace , and face verification models, Dlib, FaceNet,and ArcFace.The extensive experiments show that the success rates of DoS attacks against face detection models reach 97.67%, 100%, and 100%, respectively, and the success rates of dodging attacks against all face verification models reach 100%

    Topography, structural and exhumation history of the Admiralty Mountains region, northern Victoria Land, Antarctica

    Get PDF
    International audience; The Admiralty Mountains region forms the northern termination of the northern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Few quantitative data are available to reconstruct the Cenozoic morpho-tectonic evolution of this sector of the Antarctic plate, where the Admiralty Mountains region forms the northern termination of the western shoulder of the Mesozoic-Cenozoic West Antarctica Rift System. In this study we combine new low-temperature thermochronological data (apatite fission-track and (U-Th-Sm)/He analyses) with structural and topography analysis. The regional pattern of the fission-track ages shows a general tendency to older ages (80–60 Ma) associated with shortened mean track-lengths in the interior, and younger fission-track ages clustering at 38–26 Ma with long mean track-lengths in the coastal region. Differently from other regions of Victoria Land, the younger ages are found as far as 50–70 km inland. Single grain apatite (U-Th-Sm)/He ages cluster at 50–30 Ma with younger ages in the coastal domain. Topography analysis reveals that the Admiralty Mountains has high local relief, with an area close to the coast, 180 km long and 70 km large, having the highest local relief of >2500 m. This coincides with the location of the youngest fission-track ages. The shape of the area with highest local relief matches the shape of a recently detected low velocity zone beneath the northern TAM, indicating that high topography of the Admiralty Mountains region is likely sustained by a mantle thermal anomaly. We used the obtained constraints on the amount of removed crustal section to reconstruct back-eroded profiles and calculate the erosional load in order to test flexural uplift models. We found that our back-eroded profiles are better reproduced by a constant elastic thickness of intermediate values (Te = 20–30 km). This suggests that, beneath the Admiralty Mountains, the elastic properties of the lithosphere are different with respect to other TAM sectors, likely due to a stationary Cenozoic upper mantle thermal anomaly in the region
    • …
    corecore