The Effects of Spectral Dimensionality Reduction on Hyperspectral Image Classification. A Case Study


Phuong D. Dao1
Kiran Mantripragada2
Yuhong He1
Remote Sensing and Spatial Ecosystem Modeling Laboratory1
Department of Geography, Geomatics and Environment
University of Toronto
3359 Mississauga Road, Mississauga ON L5L 1C6
Visual Computing Lab2
Faculty of Science
University of Ontario Institute of Technology
2000 Simcoe St. N., Oshawa ON L1G 0C5

Abstract

This paper presents a systematic study of the effects of hyperspectral pixel dimensionality reduction on the pixel classification task. We use five dimensionality reduction methods—PCA, KPCA, ICA, AE, and DAE—to compress 301-dimensional hyperspectral pixels. Compressed pixels are subsequently used to perform pixel classifications. Pixel classification accuracies together with compression method, compression rates, and reconstruction errors provide a new lens to study the suitability of a compression method for the task of pixel classification. We use three high-resolution hyperspectral image datasets, representing three common landscape types (i.e. urban, transitional suburban, and forests) collected by the Remote Sensing and Spatial Ecosystem Modeling laboratory of the University of Toronto. We found that PCA, KPCA, and ICA post greater signal reconstruction capability; however, when compression rates are more than 90% these methods show lower classification scores. AE and DAE methods post better classification accuracy at 95% compression rate, however their performance drops as compression rate approaches 97%. Our results suggest that both the compression method and the compression rate are important considerations when designing a hyperspectral pixel classification pipeline.


Dataset

Datasets used in this study are available here.

Publication

For technical details please look at the following publications