Abstract
Hyperspectral (HS) pansharpening aims at fusing an observed HS image with a panchromatic (PAN) image, to produce an image with the high spectral resolution of the former and the high spatial resolution of the latter. Most of the existing convolutional neural networks (CNNs)-based pansharpening methods reconstruct the desired high-resolution image from the encoded low-resolution (LR) representation. However, the encoded LR representation captures semantic information of the image and is inadequate in reconstructing fine details. How to effectively extract high-resolution and LR representations for high-resolution image reconstruction is the main objective of this article. In this article, we propose a feature pyramid fusion network (FPFNet) for pansharpening, which permits the network to extract multiresolution representations from PAN and HS images in two branches. The PAN branch starts from the high-resolution stream that maintains the spatial resolution of the PAN image and gradually adds LR streams in parallel. The structure of the HS branch remains highly consistent with that of the PAN branch, but starts with the LR stream and gradually adds high-resolution streams. The representations with corresponding resolutions of PAN and HS branches are fused and gradually upsampled in a coarse to fine manner to reconstruct the high-resolution HS image. Experimental results on three datasets demonstrate the significant superiority of the proposed FPFNet over the state-of-the-art methods in terms of both qualitative and quantitative comparisons.
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More From: IEEE transactions on neural networks and learning systems
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