scholarly journals Spectrally-Spatially Regularized Low-Rank and Sparse Decomposition: A Novel Method for Change Detection in Multitemporal Hyperspectral Images

2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 1044 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhao Chen ◽  
Bin Wang
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (7) ◽  
pp. 1249
Author(s):  
Sungho Kim ◽  
Jungsub Shin ◽  
Sunho Kim

This paper presents a novel method for atmospheric transmittance-temperature-emissivity separation (AT2ES) using online midwave infrared hyperspectral images. Conventionally, temperature and emissivity separation (TES) is a well-known problem in the remote sensing domain. However, previous approaches use the atmospheric correction process before TES using MODTRAN in the long wave infrared band. Simultaneous online atmospheric transmittance-temperature-emissivity separation starts with approximation of the radiative transfer equation in the upper midwave infrared band. The highest atmospheric band is used to estimate surface temperature, assuming high emissive materials. The lowest atmospheric band (CO2 absorption band) is used to estimate air temperature. Through onsite hyperspectral data regression, atmospheric transmittance is obtained from the y-intercept, and emissivity is separated using the observed radiance, the separated object temperature, the air temperature, and atmospheric transmittance. The advantage with the proposed method is from being the first attempt at simultaneous AT2ES and online separation without any prior knowledge and pre-processing. Midwave Fourier transform infrared (FTIR)-based outdoor experimental results validate the feasibility of the proposed AT2ES method.


2020 ◽  
Vol 523 ◽  
pp. 14-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huafeng Li ◽  
Xiaoge He ◽  
Zhengtao Yu ◽  
Jiebo Luo

2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 1135 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wensong Liu ◽  
Jie Yang ◽  
Jinqi Zhao ◽  
Le Yang

2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (9) ◽  
pp. 1628 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shiyang Zhou ◽  
Shiqian Wu ◽  
Huaiguang Liu ◽  
Yang Lu ◽  
Nianzong Hu

Surface defect segmentation supports real-time surface defect detection system of steel sheet by reducing redundant information and highlighting the critical defect regions for high-level image understanding. Existing defect segmentation methods usually lack adaptiveness to different shape, size and scale of the defect object. Based on the observation that the defective area can be regarded as the salient part of image, a saliency detection model using double low-rank and sparse decomposition (DLRSD) is proposed for surface defect segmentation. The proposed method adopts a low-rank assumption which characterizes the defective sub-regions and defect-free background sub-regions respectively. In addition, DLRSD model uses sparse constrains for background sub-regions so as to improve the robustness to noise and uneven illumination simultaneously. Then the Laplacian regularization among spatially adjacent sub-regions is incorporated into the DLRSD model in order to uniformly highlight the defect object. Our proposed DLRSD-based segmentation method consists of three steps: firstly, using DLRSD model to obtain the defect foreground image; then, enhancing the foreground image to establish the good foundation for segmentation; finally, the Otsu’s method is used to choose an optimal threshold automatically for segmentation. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method outperforms state-of-the-art approaches in terms of both subjective and objective tests. Meanwhile, the proposed method is applicable to industrial detection with limited computational resources.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 1827 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahram Song ◽  
Jaewan Choi ◽  
Youkyung Han ◽  
Yongil Kim

Hyperspectral change detection (CD) can be effectively performed using deep-learning networks. Although these approaches require qualified training samples, it is difficult to obtain ground-truth data in the real world. Preserving spatial information during training is difficult due to structural limitations. To solve such problems, our study proposed a novel CD method for hyperspectral images (HSIs), including sample generation and a deep-learning network, called the recurrent three-dimensional (3D) fully convolutional network (Re3FCN), which merged the advantages of a 3D fully convolutional network (FCN) and a convolutional long short-term memory (ConvLSTM). Principal component analysis (PCA) and the spectral correlation angle (SCA) were used to generate training samples with high probabilities of being changed or unchanged. The strategy assisted in training fewer samples of representative feature expression. The Re3FCN was mainly comprised of spectral–spatial and temporal modules. Particularly, a spectral–spatial module with a 3D convolutional layer extracts the spectral–spatial features from the HSIs simultaneously, whilst a temporal module with ConvLSTM records and analyzes the multi-temporal HSI change information. The study first proposed a simple and effective method to generate samples for network training. This method can be applied effectively to cases with no training samples. Re3FCN can perform end-to-end detection for binary and multiple changes. Moreover, Re3FCN can receive multi-temporal HSIs directly as input without learning the characteristics of multiple changes. Finally, the network could extract joint spectral–spatial–temporal features and it preserved the spatial structure during the learning process through the fully convolutional structure. This study was the first to use a 3D FCN and a ConvLSTM for the remote-sensing CD. To demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed CD method, we performed binary and multi-class CD experiments. Results revealed that the Re3FCN outperformed the other conventional methods, such as change vector analysis, iteratively reweighted multivariate alteration detection, PCA-SCA, FCN, and the combination of 2D convolutional layers-fully connected LSTM.


Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (11) ◽  
pp. 3627 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi Zhang ◽  
Zebin Wu ◽  
Jin Sun ◽  
Yan Zhang ◽  
Yaoqin Zhu ◽  
...  

Anomaly detection aims to separate anomalous pixels from the background, and has become an important application of remotely sensed hyperspectral image processing. Anomaly detection methods based on low-rank and sparse representation (LRASR) can accurately detect anomalous pixels. However, with the significant volume increase of hyperspectral image repositories, such techniques consume a significant amount of time (mainly due to the massive amount of matrix computations involved). In this paper, we propose a novel distributed parallel algorithm (DPA) by redesigning key operators of LRASR in terms of MapReduce model to accelerate LRASR on cloud computing architectures. Independent computation operators are explored and executed in parallel on Spark. Specifically, we reconstitute the hyperspectral images in an appropriate format for efficient DPA processing, design the optimized storage strategy, and develop a pre-merge mechanism to reduce data transmission. Besides, a repartitioning policy is also proposed to improve DPA’s efficiency. Our experimental results demonstrate that the newly developed DPA achieves very high speedups when accelerating LRASR, in addition to maintaining similar accuracies. Moreover, our proposed DPA is shown to be scalable with the number of computing nodes and capable of processing big hyperspectral images involving massive amounts of data.


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