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Hyperspectral Image Classification With Deep Feature Fusion Network

556

Citations

55

References

2018

Year

Abstract

Recently, deep learning has been introduced to classify hyperspectral images (HSIs) and achieved good performance. In general, deep models adopt a large number of hierarchical layers to extract features. However, excessively increasing network depth will result in some negative effects (e.g., overfitting, gradient vanishing, and accuracy degrading) for conventional convolutional neural networks. In addition, the previous networks used in HSI classification do not consider the strong complementary yet correlated information among different hierarchical layers. To address the above two issues, a deep feature fusion network (DFFN) is proposed for HSI classification. On the one hand, the residual learning is introduced to optimize several convolutional layers as the identity mapping, which can ease the training of deep network and benefit from increasing depth. As a result, we can build a very deep network to extract more discriminative features of HSIs. On the other hand, the proposed DFFN model fuses the outputs of different hierarchical layers, which can further improve the classification accuracy. Experimental results on three real HSIs demonstrate that the proposed method outperforms other competitive classifiers.

References

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