Two-Endmembers Three-Endmembers
(20) (100)
GV + SHD GV + N/SA + SHD
N/S/1 + SHD GV + W1 + SHD
WI + SHD GV + W2 + SHD
W2 + SHD N/S/1 + W1 + SHD
N/SA + W2 + SHD
W1 + W2 + SHD
Four-Endmembers
(500)
GV + N/S/ + W1 + SHD
GV + N/S/T + W2 + SHD
GV + WI1 + W2 + SHD
N/S/ + W1 + W2 + SHD
Table 3. Endmember combinations
four-EM models as 0.6% in reflectance respectively. After the
shade fractions were normalized, land cover class accuracy was
assessed using 80 sample pixels of field records (20 per EM
land cover class).
6. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
6.1 Input data combinations for ESTARFM
The AADs between the observed and blended reflectance for
the input combinations that achieved highest mean values of
AADs in all spectral bands on each target date are shown in
Table 4. The three alphabet codes stand for the input
combinations. Each alphabet in the codes corresponds to
observation dates as summarized in Table 1. The first and third
lower alphabets refer to the prior and posterior dates, and
second upper alphabets refer to the target dates. Therefore, one
TM and one MODIS images were utilized on the dates denoted
by lower case letters, while one MODIS image was utilized on
the dates denoted by upper case letters.
The tests of all input combinations demonstrated that
ESTARFM did not always obtain strong agreement when the
prior and posterior dates are closer to the target dates. This fact
suggested that the correlation between the observed and
blended reflectance may have depended on other environmental
factors in the study area, such as phenological stage of the
wetland vegetation and water level of the lake. The difference
between observed and blended reflectance was generally larger
in the spectral bands with longer wavelengths, such as near-
infrared (NIR), shorter and longer shortwave infrared (SWIR)
bands. Larger differences were found particularly in the visible
blue and NIR bands when the input reflectance with cloud
contamination was utilized to blend the reflectance.
6.2 Applicability of MESMA to blended data
6.2.1 Percentages of modeled pixels: The percentages of
pixels modeled by MESMA for the observed and blended
reflectance data is shown in Figure 2. All three cases using the
observed reflectance data (Cases 1, 3, and 5) achieved high
percentages of modeled pixels (higher than 89%) except for
Case 3 on September 13, 2005. However, many pixels in the
blended data could not be unmixed by other three cases (Cases
2, 4, 6), particularly on August 12 and September 13 in 2005.
International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Volume XXXIX-B8, 2012
XXII ISPRS Congress, 25 August — 01 September 2012, Melbourne, Australia
Tae Combination| Blue | Green | Red
date
2004/10/28 aBd 1.06] 126} 1.38
2004/11/29 bCd 105, 153] 1.52
2004/12/15 cDh 1.441 1.86| 1.87
2005/3/5 dEh 2.68| 2.07| 1.89
2005/8/12 aFg 3.10] 3.00] 2.65
2005/9/13 fGh 3.68| 3.58| 3.08
2005/9/29 aHi 1.5G| 157) 2.05
Target Shorter | Longer
date NIE: | sw { sw | M0
2004/10/28 3.771 4.26] 3.23] 2.49
2004/11/29 2.39| 3.03] 2.46] 2.00
2004/12/15 2.48] 3.65] 2.84] 2.36
2005/3/5 300] 4.257 3.23| 2.87
2005/8/12 4.81 2.60] 2.90| 3.18
2005/9/13 554 385) 226| 367
2005/9/29 4.19| 329° 2.74] 2.56
* Unit: 96 of reflectance
Table 4. Average absolute differences between the observed and
blended reflectance for best input combinations
100 *
95. -
90
85:
80 -
75
70
Percentage of modeled pixels
> x $ & o $
S S S S S S
+ S uS a
SS N A> WY N
sellos Cas el "+= Case 2
ws op « Case 3 = @ = Case4
mee Case 5 —X- = Case 6
Figure 2. Percentages of modeled pixels in the MESMA of
observed and blended reflectance data
This is mainly because the input blended data for those dates
had larger differences in reflectance from the observed data in
the blue, green, read and NIR bands than the blended
reflectance for other dates. It led to the RMSEs larger than the
modeling threshold (2.5% reflectance) in all EM models. For
each comparison, the cases for the observed data reached higher
percentage of modeled pixels than those for the blended data,
except for in the Comparison 1 on March 5, 2005 and
Comparison 2 on September 29, 2005. Although no significant
difference in the percentage of modeled pixels was found
among the three cases for blended data, differences in the
percentage of modeled pixels (larger than 5%) were confirmed
among the three cases for observed data on August 12 and
September 13 in 2005, suggesting that the differences were
brought by the inclusion of EM spectra on different dates and
data sources (observed, blended or both reflectance).
Int
Kappa coefficient
Kappa coefficient
Figu
6.2.2
kapp:
EM c
blend
coeffi
accur
confu
broug
reflec
betwe
under
to tk
value
data)
dates,
dates.
data
in Cc
Septe
5, Au
the d
comp
coeffi
2004,
obser
value
optim
and 6
dates.
differ
6.2.3
LCFs
summ
case
W2 1
three