Kernel Methods for Remote Sensing Data AnalysisISBN: 978-0-470-72211-4
Hardcover
434 pages
December 2009
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Kernel methods have long been established as effective techniques
in the framework of machine learning and pattern recognition, and
have now become the standard approach to many remote sensing
applications. With algorithms that combine statistics and geometry,
kernel methods have proven successful across many different
domains related to the analysis of images of the Earth acquired
from airborne and satellite sensors, including natural resource
control, detection and monitoring of anthropic infrastructures
(e.g. urban areas), agriculture inventorying, disaster prevention
and damage assessment, and anomaly and target detection.
Presenting the theoretical foundations of kernel methods (KMs) relevant to the remote sensing domain, this book serves as a practical guide to the design and implementation of these methods. Five distinct parts present state-of-the-art research related to remote sensing based on the recent advances in kernel methods, analysing the related methodological and practical challenges:
- Part I introduces the key concepts of machine learning for remote sensing, and the theoretical and practical foundations of kernel methods.
- Part II explores supervised image classification including Super Vector Machines (SVMs), kernel discriminant analysis, multi-temporal image classification, target detection with kernels, and Support Vector Data Description (SVDD) algorithms for anomaly detection.
- Part III looks at semi-supervised classification with transductive SVM approaches for hyperspectral image classification and kernel mean data classification.
- Part IV examines regression and model inversion, including the concept of a kernel unmixing algorithm for hyperspectral imagery, the theory and methods for quantitative remote sensing inverse problems with kernel-based equations, kernel-based BRDF (Bidirectional Reflectance Distribution Function), and temperature retrieval KMs.
- Part V deals with kernel-based feature extraction and provides a review of the principles of several multivariate analysis methods and their kernel extensions.
This book is aimed at engineers, scientists and researchers involved in remote sensing data processing, and also those working within machine learning and pattern recognition.