Papers Published
Abstract:
In this work, we study unsupervised classification algorithms for hyperspectral images based on band-by-band scalar histograms and vector-valued generalized histograms, obtained by vector quantization. The corresponding histograms are compared by dissimilarity metrics such as the chi-square, Kolmogorov-Smirnorv, and earth mover's distances. The histograms are constructed from homogeneous regions in the images identified by a pre-segmentation algorithm and distance metrics between pixels. We compare the traditional spectral-only segmentation algorithms C-means and ISODATA, versus spectral-spatial segmentation algorithms such as unsupervised ECHO and a novel segmentation algorithm based on scale-space concepts. We also evaluate the use of complex features consisting of the real spectrum and its derivative as the imaginary part. The comparison between the different segmentation algorithms and distance metrics is based on their unsupervised classification accuracy using three real hyperspectral images with known ground truth.