Abstract

Band selection is one of the most effective methods to reduce the band redundancy of hyperspectral images (HSIs). Most existing band selection methods tend to regard each band as a whole, and then explore the band redundancy with the pixel-wise features directly. However, since the regions of HSIs corresponding to different objects have diverse spectral properties and spatial structure, such above scheme limits the performance of hyperspectral band selection due to the lack of spatial information. To address above issues, a novel band selection method via region-aware latent features fusion based clustering (RLFFC) is proposed. Specifically, we employ the superpixel segmentation to segment HSIs into multiple regions so that the spatial information of HSIs can be fully preserved. In order to capture the priori information, we construct its corresponding Laplacian matrix from which a group of low dimensional latent features are generated to further enhance the separability among different bands. Then, a shared latent feature representation of HSIs is obtained by fusing region-aware latent features to effectively capture the band redundancy of HSIs. Finally, the k-means clustering algorithm is utilized to obtain the index of the selected bands from the shared latent feature representation. As a result, the spectral and spatial properties are well exploited in the proposed method. Extensive experiments on four public hyperspectral datasets show that the proposed method achieves superior performance when compared with other state-of-the-art ones.

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