Abstract

Cross-domain polarimetric synthetic aperture radar interpretation is urgently needed, due to the rapid data growth and label scarcity. However, the class distribution shift problems hinder the reuse of labeled samples among cross-domain images. Most of the existing domain adaptations can only handle the cross-domain case of same categories between source and target domains, while the categories of the target domain are usually more abundant than those of the source domain. To improve the usability of labeled samples among cross-domain images, an unsupervised generalized zero-shot domain adaptation (uGZSDA) based on scattering component semantics (SCSs) is proposed. By using SCSs and limited labeled samples (seen categories) in the source domain, more land cover types (seen and unseen categories) in the unlabeled target domain can be inferred. First, a stacked autoencoder (SAE) extracts source/target-domain features, and SCSs of typical land covers are constructed by cross-domain databases and statistical scattering components. Second, combining SAE features and source-domain samples, the most likely seen class samples in the target domain are selected by probability sorting, and the SAE is retrained by obtained selected seen samples. Third, the unseen class samples in the target domain are inferred by the retrained SAE, classification probability, and semantic similarity. Finally, the selected seen and inferred unseen class samples in the target domain are used to further retrain the SAE, and the target domain is classified by the retrained SAE and the classifier. The proposed uGZSDA is verified among 16 cross-domain PolSAR datasets. Using SCS and two to three types of seen samples from the source domain, the accuracies of seven types of land covers in the unlabeled target domain can reach 76–83.96%.

Highlights

  • P OLARIMETRIC synthetic aperture radar (PolSAR) can provide rich polarimetric scattering information for observed land covers under full-time and all-weather conditions [1], [2]

  • Combined with the re-trained stacked autoencoder (SAE) network and target domain seen classes, the most likely unseen class samples in target domain are inferred by using the classification probability and semantic similarity distances, and the specific unseen category is inferred by combining the semantic similarities with SCS

  • The stacked auto-encoder (SAE) model is a deep neural network model composed of multi-layer autoencoder network (AE), and the output of the former layer is used as the input of the latter layer, and the output representation of the highest level can be used as input to a stand-alone supervised learning algorithm [43], [44]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

P OLARIMETRIC synthetic aperture radar (PolSAR) can provide rich polarimetric scattering information for observed land covers under full-time and all-weather conditions [1], [2]. Accurately labeled samples are difficult to obtain in PolSAR [3], [37], it is necessary to further make the utmost of limited labeled samples in more unlabeled target domains and achieve a more robust and practical unsupervised cross-domain PolSAR classification framework Inspired by these demands, to further improve the reuse efficiency of PolSAR labeled samples and expand application scopes, an unsupervised generalized zero-shot learning domain adaptation (uGZSDA) is proposed in this paper. 1) A novel uDA framework, uGZSDA is proposed for cross-domain PolSAR interpretation It classifies and infers more abundant land cover types in unlabeled target domain, reusing a few types of labeled samples from source domain. CDS of typical cross-domain PolSAR data are illustrated, followed by a brief overview of previous studies related to statistical scattering components [5]

The uGZSDA problem formulation
Statistical Scattering Components
PROPOSED METHOD
Scattering components semantics
Feature extraction model based on SAE
Probabilistic ranking and semantic similarity
EXPERIMENTS AND RESULT ANALYSIS
Dataset Descriptions and Experimental Settings
Scattering component semantics performances
Evaluation of proposed uGZSDA frameworks
Comparisons and special cases
Findings
CONCLUSION
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