Classification of complex environments using pixel level fusion of satellite data

2020 
The present study reports classification and analysis of composite land features using fusion images obtained by fusing two original hyperspectral and multispectral datasets. The high spatial-spectral resolution, multi-instrument and multi-period satellite images were used for fusion. Three pixel level fusion based techniques, Color Normalized Spectral Sharpening (CNSS), Principal Component Spectral Sharpening Transform (PCSST) and Gram-Schmidt Transform (GST), were implemented on the datasets. Performance evaluations of three fusion algorithms were done using classification results. The Support Vector Machine (SVM) and Gaussian Maximum Likelihood Classification (MLC) were used for classification using five types of images, viz. hyperspectral, multispectral and three fused images. Number of classes considered was eight. Sufficient number of ground field data for each class has also been acquired which was needed for supervise based classification. The accuracy was improved from 74.44 to 97.65% when the fused images were considered with SVM classifier. Similarly, the results were improved from 69.25 to 94.61% with original and fused data using MLC classifier. The fusion image technique was found to be superior to the single original image and the SVM is better than the MLC method.
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