Abstract

Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) are becoming increasingly popular in modern remote sensing image processing tasks and exhibit outstanding capability for hyperspectral image (HSI) classification. However, for the existing CNN-based HSI-classification methods, most of them only consider single-scale feature extraction, which may neglect some important fine information and cannot guarantee to capture optimal spatial features. Moreover, many state-of-the-art methods have a huge number of network parameters needed to be tuned, which will cause high computational cost. To address the aforementioned two issues, a novel multiscale residual network (MSRN) is proposed for HSI classification. Specifically, the proposed MSRN introduces depthwise separable convolution (DSC) and replaces the ordinary depthwise convolution in DSC with mixed depthwise convolution (MDConv), which mixes up multiple kernel sizes in a single depthwise convolution operation. The DSC with mixed depthwise convolution (MDSConv) can not only explore features at different scales from each feature map but also greatly reduce learnable parameters in the network. In addition, a multiscale residual block (MRB) is designed by replacing the convolutional layer in an ordinary residual block with the MDSConv layer. The MRB is used as the major unit of the proposed MSRN. Furthermore, to enhance further the feature representation ability, the proposed network adds a high-level shortcut connection (HSC) on the cascaded two MRBs to aggregate lower level features and higher level features. Experimental results on three benchmark HSIs demonstrate the superiority of the proposed MSRN method over several state-of-the-art methods.

Full Text
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