Abstract

Recently, multispectral and hyperspectral data fusion models based on deep learning have been proposed to generate images with a high spatial and spectral resolution. The general objective is to obtain images that improve spatial resolution while preserving high spectral content. In this work, two deep learning data fusion techniques are characterized in terms of classification accuracy. These methods fuse a high spatial resolution multispectral image with a lower spatial resolution hyperspectral image to generate a high spatial-spectral hyperspectral image. The first model is based on a multi-scale long short-term memory (LSTM) network. The LSTM approach performs the fusion using a multiple step process that transitions from low to high spatial resolution using an intermediate step capable of reducing spatial information loss while preserving spectral content. The second fusion model is based on a convolutional neural network (CNN) data fusion approach. We present fused images using four multi-source datasets with different spatial and spectral resolutions. Both models provide fused images with increased spatial resolution from 8m to 1m. The obtained fused images using the two models are evaluated in terms of classification accuracy on several classifiers: Minimum Distance, Support Vector Machines, Class-Dependent Sparse Representation and CNN classification. The classification results show better performance in both overall and average accuracy for the images generated with the multi-scale LSTM fusion over the CNN fusion.

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