Abstract

In Blind Hyperspectral Unmixing, the accuracy of the estimated number of endmembers affects the succeeding steps of extraction of endmember signatures and acquiring their fractional abundances. The characteristics of endmember signature depend on the nature of the material on the ground and share similar characteristics for variants of the same material. In this paper, we introduce a new concept of sub-endmembers to identify similar materials that are variants of a global endmember. Identifying the sub-endmembers will provide a meaningful interpretation of the endmember variability along with increased unmixing accuracy. This paper proposes a new algorithm exploiting both the spatial and spectral information present in hyperspectral data. The hyperspectral data are segmented into homogenous regions (superpixels) based on the Simple Linear Iterative Clustering (SLIC) algorithm, and the mean spectral of each region is accounted for in finding the global endmembers. The difference of eigenvalues-based thresholding method is used to find the number of global and sub-endmembers. The method has been tested on synthetic and real hyperspectral data and has successfully estimated the number of global endmembers as well as sub-endmembers. The method is also compared with other state-of-the-art methods, and better performances are obtained at a reasonably lower computational complexity.

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