Abstract
The immense representation power of deep learning frameworks has kept them in the spotlight in hyperspectral image (HSI) classification. Graph Convolutional Neural Networks (GCNs) can be used to compensate for the lack of spatial information in Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs). However, most GCNs construct graph data structures based on pixel points, which requires the construction of neighborhood matrices on all data. Meanwhile, the setting of GCNs to construct similarity relations based on spatial structure is not fully applicable to HSIs. To make the network more compatible with HSIs, we propose a staged feature fusion model called SFFNet, a neural network framework connecting CNN and GCN models. The CNN performs the first stage of feature extraction, assisted by adding neighboring features and overcoming the defects of local convolution; then, the GCN performs the second stage for classification, and the graph data structure is constructed based on spectral similarity, optimizing the original connectivity relationships. In addition, the framework enables the batch training of the GCN by using the extracted spectral features as nodes, which greatly reduces the hardware requirements. The experimental results on three publicly available benchmark hyperspectral datasets show that our proposed framework outperforms other relevant deep learning models, with an overall classification accuracy of over 97%.
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