• Title/Summary/Keyword: hyperspectral reflectance

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Specific Material Detection with Similar Colors using Feature Selection and Band Ratio in Hyperspectral Image (초분광 영상 특징선택과 밴드비 기법을 이용한 유사색상의 특이재질 검출기법)

  • Shim, Min-Sheob;Kim, Sungho
    • Journal of Institute of Control, Robotics and Systems
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    • v.19 no.12
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    • pp.1081-1088
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    • 2013
  • Hyperspectral cameras acquire reflectance values at many different wavelength bands. Dimensions tend to increase because spectral information is stored in each pixel. Several attempts have been made to reduce dimensional problems such as the feature selection using Adaboost and dimension reduction using the Simulated Annealing technique. We propose a novel material detection method that consists of four steps: feature band selection, feature extraction, SVM (Support Vector Machine) learning, and target and specific region detection. It is a combination of the band ratio method and Simulated Annealing algorithm based on detection rate. The experimental results validate the effectiveness of the proposed feature selection and band ratio method.

An Analysis of Spectral Characteristic Information on the Water Level Changes and Bed Materials (수위변화에 따른 하상재료의 분광특성정보 분석)

  • Kang, Joongu;Lee, Changhun;Kim, Jihyun;Ko, Dongwoo;Kim, Jongtae
    • Ecology and Resilient Infrastructure
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    • v.6 no.4
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    • pp.243-249
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    • 2019
  • The purpose of this study is to analyze the reflectance of bed materials according to changes in the water level using a drone-based hyperspectral sensor. For this purpose, we took hyperspectral images of bed materials such as soil, gravel, cobble, reed, and vegetation to compare and analyze the spectral data of each material. To adjust the water level, we constructed an experimental channel to control the discharge and installed the bed materials within the channel. In this study, we configured 3 cases according to the water level (0.0 m, 0.3 m, 0.6 m). After the imaging process, we used the mean value of 10 points for each bed material as analytical data. According to the analysis, each material showed a similar reflectance by wavelength and the intrinsic reflectance characteristics of each material were shown in the visible and near-infrared region. Also, the deeper the water level, the lower the peak reflectance in the visible and near-infrared region, and the rate of decrease differed depending on the bed material. We expect the intrinsic properties of these bed materials to be used as basic research data to evaluate river environments in the future.

Vicarious Radiometric Calibration of RapidEye Satellite Image Using CASI Hyperspectral Data (CASI 초분광 영상을 이용한 RapidEye 위성영상의 대리복사보정)

  • Chang, An Jin;Choi, Jae Wan;Song, Ah Ram;Kim, Ye Ji;Jung, Jin Ha
    • Journal of Korean Society for Geospatial Information Science
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    • v.23 no.3
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    • pp.3-10
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    • 2015
  • All kinds of objects on the ground have inherent spectral reflectance curves, which can be used to classify the ground objects and to detect the target. Remotely sensed data have to be transferred to spectral reflectance for accurate analysis. There are formula methods provided by the institution, mathematical model method and ground-data-based method. In this study, RapidEye satellite image was converted to reflectance data using spectral reflectance of a CASI hyperspectral image by using vicarious radiometric calibration. The results were compared with those of the other calibration methods and ground data. The proposed method was closer to the ground data than ATCOR and New Kurucz 2005 method and equal with ELM method.

Hyperspectral Imaging and Partial Least Square Discriminant Analysis for Geographical Origin Discrimination of White Rice

  • Mo, Changyeun;Lim, Jongguk;Kwon, Sung Won;Lim, Dong Kyu;Kim, Moon S.;Kim, Giyoung;Kang, Jungsook;Kwon, Kyung-Do;Cho, Byoung-Kwan
    • Journal of Biosystems Engineering
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    • v.42 no.4
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    • pp.293-300
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    • 2017
  • Purpose: This study aims to propose a method for fast geographical origin discrimination between domestic and imported rice using a visible/near-infrared (VNIR) hyperspectral imaging technique. Methods: Hyperspectral reflectance images of South Korean and Chinese rice samples were obtained in the range of 400 nm to 1000 nm. Partial least square discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) models were developed and applied to the acquired images to determine the geographical origin of the rice samples. Results: The optimal pixel dimensions and spectral pretreatment conditions for the hyperspectral images were identified to improve the discrimination accuracy. The results revealed that the highest accuracy was achieved when the hyperspectral image's pixel dimension was $3.0mm{\times}3.0mm$. Furthermore, the geographical origin discrimination models achieved a discrimination accuracy of over 99.99% upon application of a first-order derivative, second-order derivative, maximum normalization, or baseline pretreatment. Conclusions: The results demonstrated that the VNIR hyperspectral imaging technique can be used to discriminate geographical origins of rice.

Noisy Band Removal Using Band Correlation in Hyperspectral lmages

  • Huan, Nguyen Van;Kim, Hak-Il
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.25 no.3
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    • pp.263-270
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    • 2009
  • Noise band removal is a crucial step before spectral matching since the noise bands can distort the typical shape of spectral reflectance, leading to degradation on the matching results. This paper proposes a statistical noise band removal method for hyperspectral data using the correlation coefficient between two bands. The correlation coefficient measures the strength and direction of a linear relationship between two random variables. Considering each band of the hyperspectral data as a random variable, the correlation between two signal bands is high; existence of a noisy band will produce a low correlation due to ill-correlativeness and undirected ness. The unsupervised k-nearest neighbor clustering method is implemented in accordance with three well-accepted spectral matching measures, namely ED, SAM and SID in order to evaluate the validation of the proposed method. This paper also proposes a hierarchical scheme of combining those measures. Finally, a separability assessment based on the between-class and the within-class scatter matrices is followed to evaluate the applicability of the proposed noise band removal method. Also, the paper brings out a comparison for spectral matching measures. The experimental results conducted on a 228-band hyperspectral data show that while the SAM measure is rather resistant, the performance of SID measure is more sensitive to noise.

IMAGING SPECTROMETRY FOR DETECTING FECES AND INGESTA ON POULTRY CARCASSES

  • Park, Bo-Soon;William R.Windham;Kurt C.Lawrence;Smith, Douglas-P
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Near Infrared Spectroscopy Conference
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    • 2001.06a
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    • pp.3106-3106
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    • 2001
  • Imaging spectrometry or hyperspectral imaging is a recent development that makes possible quantitative and qualitative measurement for food quality and safety. This paper presents the research results that a hyperspectral imaging system can be used effectively for detecting fecal (from duodenum, cecum, and colon) and ingesta contamination on poultry carcasses from the different feed meals (wheat, mile, and corn with soybean) for poultry safety inspection. A hyperspectral imaging system has been developed and tested for the identification of fecal and ingesta surface contamination on poultry carcasses. Hypercube image data including both spectral and spatial domains between 430 and 900 nm were acquired from poultry carcasses with fecal and ingesta contamination. A transportable hyperspectral imaging system including fiber optically fabricated line lights, motorized lens control for line scans, and hypercube image data from contaminated carcasses with different feeds are presented. Calibration method of a hyperspectral imaging system is demonstrated using different lighting sources and reflectance panels. Principal Component and Minimum Noise Fraction transformations will be discussed to characterize hyperspectral images and further image processing algorithms such as image band ratio of dual-wavelength images and its histogram stretching with thresholding process will be demonstrated to identify fecal and ingesta materials on poultry carcasses. This algorithm could be further applied for real-time classification of fecal and ingesta contamination on poultry carcasses in the poultry processing line.

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Utilization of Hyperspectral Image Analysis for Monitoring of Stone Cultural Heritages (석조문화재 모니터링을 위한 하이퍼스펙트럴 이미지분석의 활용)

  • Chun, Yu Gun;Lee, Myeong Seong;Kim, Yu Ri;Lee, Mi Hye;Choi, Myoung Ju;Choi, Ki Hyun
    • Journal of Conservation Science
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    • v.31 no.4
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    • pp.395-402
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    • 2015
  • This study was considered utilization of hyperspectral image analysis for monitoring. Accordingly we applied to stone cultural properties to data correction methods, image classification techniques, NDVI computation techniques using hyperspectral image. As the results, hyperspectral image analysis was possible making detailed deterioration map, accurate calculation of deterioration rate, mapping of normalized difference vegetation index on the basis of reflectance of each materials. Therefore, hyperspectral image analysis will be used for effective monitoring techniques of stone cultural heritages.

Evaluating Applicability of Photochemical Reflectance Index using Airborne-Based Hyperspectral Image: With Shadow Effect and Spectral Bands Characteristics (항공 초분광 영상을 이용한 광화학반사지수 이용 가능성 평가: 그림자 영향 및 대체 밴드를 중심으로)

  • Ryu, Jae-Hyun;Shin, Jung Il;Lee, Chang Suk;Hong, Sungwook;Lee, Yang-Won;Cho, Jaeil
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.33 no.5_1
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    • pp.507-519
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    • 2017
  • The applications of NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index) as a vegetation index has been widely used to understand vegetation biomass and physiological activities. However, NDVI is not suitable way for monitoring vegetation stress because it is less sensitive to change in physiological state than biomass. PRI (Photochemical Reflectance Index) is well developed to present physiological activities of vegetation, particularly high-light-stress condition, and it has been adopted in several satellites to be launched in the future. Thus, the understanding of PRI performance and the development of analysis method will be necessary. This study aims to interpret the characteristics of light-stress-sensitive PRI in shadow areas and to evaluate the PRI calculated by other wavelengths (i.e., 488.9 nm, 553.6 nm, 646.9 nm, and 668.4 nm) instead of 570 nm that used in original PRI. Using airborne-based hyperspectral image, we found that PRI values were increased in shadow detection due to the reduction of high light induced physiological stress. However, the qualities of both PRI and NDVI data were dramatically decreased when the shadow index (SI) exceeded the threshold (SI<25). In addition, the PRI calculated using by 553.6 nm had best correlation with original PRI. This relationship was improved by multiple regression analysis including reflectances of RED and NIR. These results will be helpful to the understanding of physiological meaning on the application of PRI.

Radiometric Cross Validation of KOMPSAT-3 AEISS (다목적실용위성 3호 AEISS센서의 방사 특성 교차 검증)

  • Shin, Dong-yoon;Choi, Chul-uong;Lee, Sun-gu;Ahn, Ho-yong
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.32 no.5
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    • pp.529-538
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    • 2016
  • This study, multispectral and hyperspectral sensors were utilized to use radiometric cross validation for the purpose of radiometric quality evaluation of a 'KOMPSAT-3'. Images of EO-1 Hyperion and Landsat-8 OLI sensors taken in PICS site were used. 2 sections that have 2 different types of ground coverage respectively were selected as the site of cross validation based on aerial hyperspectral sensor and TOA Reflectance. As a result of comparison between the TOA reflectance figures of KOMPSAT-3, EO-1 Hyperion and CASI-1500, the difference was roughly 4%. It is considered that it satisfies the radiological quality standard when the difference of figure of reflectance in a comparison to the other satellites is found within 5%. The difference in Blue, Green, Red band was approximately 3% as a comparison result of TOA reflectance. However the figure was relatively low in NIR band in a comparison to Landsat-8. It is thought that the relatively low reflectance is because there is a difference of band passes in NIR band of 2 sensors and in a case of KOMPSAT-3 sensor, a section of 940nm, which shows the strong absorption through water vapor, is included in band pass resulting in comparatively low reflectance. To overcome these conditions, more detailed analysis with the application of rescale method as Spectral Bandwidth Adjustment Factor (SBAF) is required.