Abstract
The paper presents a study of various approaches to the classification of soil covers based on neural network algorithms using hyperspectral remote and proximal sensing of the Earth. The spectral distributions were recorded in the laboratory using an Offner imaging scanning hyperspectrometer. Spectral-spatial characteristics of nine soil samples from various parts of a farming land in the Samara region were experimentally studied. Using a method of energy dispersion microanalysis, the correspondence between the hyperspectral data and the chemical composition of the samples taken was established. Based on the data obtained, a neural network-aided classification of soil samples was implemented depending on the content of constituent elements such as carbon and calcium. A normalized spectral-spatial convolutional neural network was used as a classifier. As a result of the work, an approach to the classification of high-resolution hyper-spectral images based on the refinement of a multiclass convolutional neural network using an ensemble of binary classifiers is proposed. It is shown that the classification of soil samples by carbon and calcium content is carried out with an accuracy of 0.96.
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