Title :
Hyperspectral linear unmixing: Quantitative evaluation of novel target design and edge unmixing technique
Author :
Goldberg, D.S. ; Kerekes, John P. ; Canham, K.A.
Author_Institution :
Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Sci., Rochester Inst. of Technol., Rochester, NY, USA
Abstract :
Remotely sensed hyperspectral images (HSI) have the potential to provide large amounts of information about a scene. HSI, in this context, are images of the Earth collected with a spatial resolution of 1m to 30m in dozens to hundreds of contiguous narrow spectral bands over different wavelengths so that each pixel is a vector of data. Spectral unmixing is one application which can utilize the large amount of information in HSI. Unmixing is a process used to retrieve a material´s spectral profile and its fractional abundance in each pixel since a single pixel contains a mixture of material spectra. Unmixing was used with images collected during an airborne hyperspectral collect at the Rochester Institute of Technology in 2010 with 1m resolution and a 390nm to 2450nm spectral range. The goal of our experiment was to quantitatively evaluate unmixing results by introducing a novel unmixing target. In addition, a single-band, edge unmixing technique is introduced with preliminary experimentation which showed results with mean unmixing fraction error of less than 10%. The results of the methods presented above helped in the design of future collection experiments.
Keywords :
hyperspectral imaging; image resolution; remote sensing; airborne hyperspectral collect; edge unmixing technique; fractional abundance; hyperspectral linear unmixing; quantitative evaluation; remotely sensed hyperspectral image; spatial resolution; spectral profile; spectral unmixing; unmixing fraction error; Hyperspectral imaging; Image edge detection; Materials; Spatial resolution; Vectors; edge unmixing; hyperspectral; spectral unmixing; validation;
Conference_Titel :
Image Processing Workshop (WNYIPW), 2012 Western New York
Conference_Location :
New York, NY
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-5598-8
DOI :
10.1109/WNYIPW.2012.6466651