Full text: XVIIIth Congress (Part B7)

  
on. If the mixtures have the same number of points then all 
four intersection points are equally probable to be the right 
answer and the result will depend on the position of each 
mixture and the shape of that set. If the two mixtures are 
not very separable then the corresponding lines will be very 
close to each other and the corresponding crossing points 
may be reduced to three, two or even one. In these cases 
the mixtures are almost identical. If one of the mixtures has 
fewer points than the other, the lines generated by it will be 
degraded and the dominant mixture should be responsible for 
the outcome. 
  
Figure 3: The mixed set contains points from two mixtures: 
half of the points belong to a mixture with composition 30-60- 
10 and the other half to a mixture with composition 30-10-60. 
The lines were added to show the lines in the Hough space 
of each mixture in each band. The four numbers indicate the 
four crossing points and correspond to the following mixtures: 
1 — (27-16-47), 2 — (12-49-39), 3 — (27-60-13), 4 — (47- 
27-26) 
3.2 Random outliers 
This type of outliers does not form a coherent set and their 
distance from the mixed set is randomly chosen in the range 
between 0 and 12 standard deviations. Such outliers can be 
seen in Figure 4. 
In this experiment, for a certain number of random outliers, a 
number of mixed sets were generated and tested. The error in 
proportion estimation was calculated, and finally the average 
and the standard deviation of the errors (given in brackets) 
in proportion estimation based on 100 experiments are shown 
in Table 3. The error in estimation of each proportion (i.e 
proportion a) was calculated as errora = 100 x la—27l where 
a is the estimated value for a and ar is the true value of a. 
As we can see in Table3 the Hough method performs very well 
and remains remarkably stable throughout the experiment. 
The LSE method seems to be affected by the outliers and its 
performance vary depending on the position of the outliers. 
Ironically, the more the outliers are and the more uniformly 
distributed about the mixed distribution they are, the bet- 
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Figure 4: Outliers placed randomly. 
  
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Table 3: Effect of random outliers in the mixed distribution. 
Mixed set composition a = 30%, b = 60%, c = 10%. 
ter the LSE method will perform because the mean of the 
mixture distribution will not be affected by their presence. 
However, such an improvement in the performance of the 
classical method is clearly artificial. 
4 WHAT IF SITES OF PURE CLASSES ARE NOT 
AVAILABLE? 
Ideally, for pure classes we would like to use sets of pixels 
representative of the pure classes extracted from the remotely 
sensed image itself. However sometimes, especially if the 
terrain tends to vary at smaller scales than the size of the 
test sites, it is difficult to find homogeneous test sites that 
belong solely to a given pure class. 
A solution to this problem is to derive the attributes of the 
pure classes from test sites for which ground measurements 
are available [Pech et al., 1986] [Gong et al., 1994]. Accord- 
ing to our model we have: 
Ww pd b5y4os (4) 
We can make use of the Hough transform again to identify 
the best values for z, y and z, if we consider that equation 
4 is an equation of a plane in the 3D space (a, b, c), which 
is parameterised by different values of w and we are inter- 
ested in identifying the luminances z, y, z. In this case we 
have a 3D accumulator array defined in the parametric (z, 
y, z) domain. We can then use the luminance values w of 
the training sites, with the estimated (by ground inspection) 
values of their mixture parameters, to identify values of (x, 
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B7. Vienna 1996 
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