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A Critical Comparison Among Pansharpening Algorithms


Abstract:

Pansharpening aims at fusing a multispectral and a panchromatic image, featuring the result of the processing with the spectral resolution of the former and the spatial r...Show More

Abstract:

Pansharpening aims at fusing a multispectral and a panchromatic image, featuring the result of the processing with the spectral resolution of the former and the spatial resolution of the latter. In the last decades, many algorithms addressing this task have been presented in the literature. However, the lack of universally recognized evaluation criteria, available image data sets for benchmarking, and standardized implementations of the algorithms makes a thorough evaluation and comparison of the different pansharpening techniques difficult to achieve. In this paper, the authors attempt to fill this gap by providing a critical description and extensive comparisons of some of the main state-of-the-art pansharpening methods. In greater details, several pansharpening algorithms belonging to the component substitution or multiresolution analysis families are considered. Such techniques are evaluated through the two main protocols for the assessment of pansharpening results, i.e., based on the full- and reduced-resolution validations. Five data sets acquired by different satellites allow for a detailed comparison of the algorithms, characterization of their performances with respect to the different instruments, and consistency of the two validation procedures. In addition, the implementation of all the pansharpening techniques considered in this paper and the framework used for running the simulations, comprising the two validation procedures and the main assessment indexes, are collected in a MATLAB toolbox that is made available to the community.
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing ( Volume: 53, Issue: 5, May 2015)
Page(s): 2565 - 2586
Date of Publication: 24 December 2014

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I. Introduction

PANSHARPENING refers to the fusion of a panchromatic (PAN) and a multispectral (MS) image simultaneously acquired over the same area. This can be seen as a particular problem of data fusion since one would aim at combining the spatial details resolved by the PAN (but not present in the MS) and the several spectral bands of the MS image (against the single band of the PAN) in a unique product. With respect to the general problem of multisensor fusion, pansharpening may not require the challenging phase of spatial coregistration, since typically images are simultaneously captured, being the sensors acquiring the PAN and the MS both mounted on the same platform [1]. Nowadays, PAN and MS images can be obtained in bundle by several commercial optical satellites, such as IKONOS, Geo-Eye, OrbView, Landsat, SPOT, QuickBird, WorldView, and Pléiades. The spatial resolution is even below half a meter for the PAN (for the commercial satellite product with the highest spatial resolution), and the spectral resolution can be up to eight bands captured in the visible and near-infrared wavelengths for the MS product. The fusion of the PAN and MS images constitutes the sole possibility for achieving images with the highest resolutions in both the spatial and spectral domains. In fact, physical constraints preclude this goal from being achieved by using a single sensor. The demand for pansharpened data is continuously growing, due to the increasing availability of commercial products using high-resolution images, e.g., Google Earth and Bing Maps. Furthermore, pansharpening constitutes an important preliminary step for enhancing images for many remote sensing tasks, such as change detection [2], object recog nition [3], visual image analysis, and scene interpretation [4].

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