Abstract

Blind hyperspectral unmixing (HU), as a crucial technique for hyperspectral data exploitation, aims to decompose mixed pixels into a collection of constituent materials weighted by the corresponding fractional abundances. In recent years, nonnegative matrix factorization (NMF) based methods have become more and more popular for this task and achieved promising performance. Among these methods, two types of properties upon the abundances, namely the sparseness and the structural smoothness, have been explored and shown to be important for blind HU. However, all of previous methods ignores another important insightful property possessed by a natural hyperspectral images (HSI), non-local smoothness, which means that similar patches in a larger region of an HSI are sharing the similar smoothness structure. Based on previous attempts on other tasks, such a prior structure reflects intrinsic configurations underlying a HSI, and is thus expected to largely improve the performance of the investigated HU problem. In this paper, we firstly consider such prior in HSI by encoding it as the nonlocal total variation (NLTV) regularizer. Furthermore, by fully exploring the intrinsic structure of HSI, we generalize NLTV to non-local HSI TV (NLHTV) to make the model more suitable for the bind HU task. By incorporating these two regularizers, together with a non-convex log-sum form regularizer characterizing the sparseness of abundance maps, to the NMF model, we propose novel blind HU models named NLTV/NLHTV and log-sum regularized NMF (NLTV-LSRNMF/NLHTV-LSRNMF), respectively. To solve the proposed models, an efficient algorithm is designed based on alternative optimization strategy (AOS) and alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM). Extensive experiments conducted on both simulated and real hyperspectral data sets substantiate the superiority of the proposed approach over other competing ones for blind HU task.

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