Abstract

A significant challenge in methods for anomaly detection (AD) in hyperspectral images (HSIs) is determining how to construct an efficient representation for anomalies and background information. Considering the high-order structures of HSIs and the estimation of anomalies and background information in AD, this article proposes a kernel minimum noise fraction transformation-based background separation model (KMNF-BSM) to separate the anomalies and background information. First, spectral-domain KMNF transformation is performed on the original hyperspectral data to fully mine the high-order correlation between spectral bands. Then, a BSM that combines the outlier removal, the iteration strategy, and the Reed–Xiaoli detector (RXD) is proposed to obtain accurate anomalous and background pixel sets based on the extracted features. Finally, the anomalous and background pixel sets are used as input for anomaly detectors to improve the background suppression and anomaly detection capabilities. Experiments on several HSIs with different spatial and spectral resolutions over different scenes are performed. The results demonstrate that the KMNF-BSM-based algorithms have better target detectability and background suppressibility than other state-of-the-art algorithms.

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