Dependent component analysis: a hyperspectral unmixing algorithm

Linear unmixing decomposes a hyperspectral image into a collection of reflectance spectra of the materials present in the scene, called endmember signatures, and the corresponding abundance fractions at each pixel in a spatial area of interest. This paper introduces a new unmixing method, called Dep...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nascimento, Jose (author)
Other Authors: Bioucas-Dias, José M. (author)
Format: bookPart
Language:eng
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10400.21/3611
Country:Portugal
Oai:oai:repositorio.ipl.pt:10400.21/3611
Description
Summary:Linear unmixing decomposes a hyperspectral image into a collection of reflectance spectra of the materials present in the scene, called endmember signatures, and the corresponding abundance fractions at each pixel in a spatial area of interest. This paper introduces a new unmixing method, called Dependent Component Analysis (DECA), which overcomes the limitations of unmixing methods based on Independent Component Analysis (ICA) and on geometrical properties of hyperspectral data. DECA models the abundance fractions as mixtures of Dirichlet densities, thus enforcing the constraints on abundance fractions imposed by the acquisition process, namely non-negativity and constant sum. The mixing matrix is inferred by a generalized expectation-maximization (GEM) type algorithm. The performance of the method is illustrated using simulated and real data.