• DocumentCode
    1106166
  • Title

    Surface Reflectance Estimation Using Prior Spatial and Spectral Information

  • Author

    Viggh, Herbert E M ; Staelin, David H.

  • Author_Institution
    Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Lexington
  • Volume
    45
  • Issue
    9
  • fYear
    2007
  • Firstpage
    2928
  • Lastpage
    2939
  • Abstract
    Surface prior-information reflectance estimation (SPIRE) algorithms estimate changes in spectral reflectance using imperfect prior spatial and spectral information. This paper combines spectral and spatial processing to estimate local changes in spectral reflectance between pairs of spectral images under spatially and spectrally varying multiplicative and additive noise, which arise from variations in illumination and atmospheric effects. This approach extends the spatial SPIRE algorithms that were described earlier and utilizes only a prior reflectance image cube and ensembles of typical multiplicative and additive illumination noise spectral vectors that are deduced from images cubes of similar scenes. The method minimizes the impact of environmental noise by replacing with their prior equivalents low-spatial-frequency content and low-order principal components that are known to be noisy based on prior noise spectra. This filtering and substitution process occurs in log space when minimizing the effects of multiplicative noise. Tests on Hyperspectral Digital Imagery Collection Experiment visible near-infrared-shortwave infrared data demonstrated the algorithm´s superior ability to estimate absolute reflectance changes under varying illumination conditions. SPIRE performance was nearly identical to the empirical line method (ELM) ground-truth-based atmospheric compensation results and was better than the physics-based Atmospheric removal (ATREM) code overall, particularly, under high clouds and haze. A ldquoSelective SPIRErdquo technique that chooses between combined-spatial/spectral and spectral-only SPIRE reflectance estimates was developed; it maximizes estimation performance on both changed and unchanged pixels. Minimum-distance classification experiments demonstrated Selective SPIRE´s superior performance relative to both ATREM and ELM in cross-image supervised classification applications.
  • Keywords
    clouds; image classification; infrared spectra; principal component analysis; remote sensing; ATREM; ELM; Hyperspectral Digital Imagery Collection Experiment; SPIRE algorithms; Selective SPIRE technique; Surface Prior-Information Reflectance Estimation; additive noise; clouds; cross-image supervised classification applications; empirical line method; environmental noise; ground-truth-based atmospheric compensation; haze; low-order principal components; low-spatial-frequency content; minimum-distance classification experiments; multiplicative noise; near-infrared-shortwave infrared data; noise spectral vectors; physics-based ATmospheric REMoval; reflectance image cube; spatial processing; spectral images pairs; spectral processing; Additive noise; Digital images; Filtering; Hyperspectral imaging; Infrared imaging; Layout; Lighting; Reflectivity; Testing; Working environment noise; Image processing; remote sensing; spatial filters; spectral analysis;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0196-2892
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TGRS.2007.898497
  • Filename
    4294108