4.7 Article

Nonlocal Means Regularized Sketched Reweighted Sparse and Low-Rank Subspace Clustering for Large Hyperspectral Images

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING
Volume 59, Issue 5, Pages 4164-4178

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TGRS.2020.3023418

Keywords

Clustering; large hyperspectral images (HSIs); nonlocal means regularization; sketched sparse subspace clustering (sketched-SSC); sparse and low-rank representation (SLRR)

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This article introduces a novel scalable nonlocal means regularized sketched reweighted sparse and low-rank (NL-SSLR) SC algorithm for large HSIs, which explores both local and global structural information of HSIs and fully utilizes spatial correlation information to enhance clustering performance.
Clustering is a common method for hyperspectral image (HSI) interpretation in the case of no labeled samples. Many subspace clustering methods have now been proposed for HSIs and have obtained remarkable success. However, because of the prohibitively large computational complexity induced by the self-dictionary representation, these methods suffer from the scalability issue and are ineffective for large HSIs. In this article, to address this issue, we focus on a scalable subspace clustering scheme and introduce the recently developed sketched subspace clustering (sketched-SC) model to HSI. The sketched-SC model is computationally inexpensive and is suitable for the large HSI clustering task as it constructs a compact yet expressive dictionary. However, several problems degrade the performance of sketched-SC, i.e., the inadequate mining of the structural information and no consideration of spatial information. In view of this, a novel scalable nonlocal means regularized sketched reweighted sparse and low-rank (NL-SSLR) SC algorithm is proposed for use with large HSIs. On the one hand, the SSLR representation model is constructed to explore the underlying local and global structural information of the HSIs at the same time. On the other hand, the nonlocal means regularization is used to fully explore the spatial correlation information and better account for the self-similarity of HSIs, to further boost the clustering performance. The experimental results obtained on two well-known hyperspectral data sets corroborate the superiority of the proposed algorithm over the other state-of-the-art HSI clustering methods.

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