Exploring the MSER-based hyperspectral remote sensing image registration

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ISSN: 0277-786X
ISBN: 9781510638792

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Image registration is an essential preprocessing task in many applications of hyperspectral images capturing the Earth surface. Maximally Stable Extremal Regions (MSER) is a feature–based method for image registration which extracts regions by thresholding the image at different grey levels. Its invariance to affine transformations makes it ideal for image registration. This method is usually employed in text detection and recognition as well as in the medical domain. Hyperspectral images contain spectral information that can be used for improving the image alignment. This article presents a first approach to a hyperspectral remote sensing image registration method based on MSER that efficiently exploits the information contained in the different spectral bands. The experimental results over four hyperspectral images show that the proposed method is promising as it achieves a higher number of correct registration cases than other feature–based methods.

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Álvaro Ordóñez, Dora B. Heras, Francisco Argüello, "Exploring the MSER-based hyperspectral remote sensing image registration," Proc. SPIE 11533, Image and Signal Processing for Remote Sensing XXVI, 115330E (20 September 2020); doi: 10.1117/12.2574200

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PID2019-104834GB-I00 ED431C 2018/19 2019-2022 ED431G-2019/04 FPU16/03537

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Copyright © 2020, Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers. Copying of material in this book for internal or personal use, or for the internal or personal use of specific clients, beyond the fair use provisions granted by the U.S. Copyright Law is authorized by SPIE subject to payment of copying fees. SPIE grants to authors (and their employers) of papers, posters, and presentation recordings published in Proceedings of SPIE the right to post an author-prepared version or the officially published version (preferred) on an internal or external repository controlled exclusively by the author/employer, or the entity funding the research.