Abstract

Polarimetric synthetic aperture radar (PolSAR) image classification, a field crucial in remote sensing, faces significant challenges due to the intricate expertise required for accurate annotation, leading to susceptibility to labeling inaccuracies. Compounding this challenge are the constraints posed by limited labeled samples and the perennial issue of class imbalance inherent in PolSAR image classification. Our research objectives are to address these challenges by developing a novel label correction mechanism, implementing self-distillation-based contrastive learning, and introducing a sample rebalancing loss function. To address the quandary of noisy labels, we proffer a novel label correction mechanism that capitalizes on inherent sample similarities to rectify erroneously labeled instances. In parallel, to mitigate the limitation of sparsely labeled data, this study delves into self-distillation-based contrastive learning, harnessing sample affinities for nuanced feature extraction. Moreover, we introduce a sample rebalancing loss function that adjusts class weights and augments data for small classes. Through extensive experiments on four benchmark PolSAR images, our approach demonstrates its effectiveness in addressing label inaccuracies, limited samples, and class imbalance. Through extensive experiments on four benchmark PolSAR images, our research substantiates the robustness of our proposed methodology, particularly in rectifying label discrepancies in contexts marked by sample paucity and imbalance. The empirical findings illuminate the superior efficacy of our approach, positioning it at the forefront of state-of-the-art PolSAR classification techniques.

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