4.6 Article

Boosting: a classification method for remote sensing

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF REMOTE SENSING
Volume 28, Issue 7-8, Pages 1687-1710

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/01431160500469985

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This article sets out to demonstrate how boosting can serve as a supervised classification method, and to compare its results with those of conventional methods. The comparison begins with a theoretical example in which several criteria are varied: number of pixels per class, overlapping (or not) of radiometric values between classes, and presence and absence of spatial structuring of classes within the geographical space. The results are then compared with a real case study of land cover based on a multispectral SPOT image of the Sousson catchment area (South of France). It is seen that (1) maximum likelihood gives better results than boosting when the radiometric values for each class are clearly separated. This advantage is lost as the number of pixels per class increases; (2) boosting is systematically better than maximum likelihood in the event of overlapping radiometric variable classes, whether or not there is a spatial structure.

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