International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Vol. 32, Part 7-4-3 W6, Valladolid, Spain, 3-4 June, 1999
172
(b)
Fig. 5. Scatter-plots of local standard deviation vs. local mean
of SPOT-P: (a) corrupted with additive Gaussian noise
of a'i — 400; (b) corrupted with multiplicative noise of
cr'i — 0.069. Regression lines are calculated using only
the highlighted points.
Method
7 7
2 -'2
Gu ® u
Log-Scatter-Plot
0 0.12
1 0.97
400 172.4
0.069 0.113
Scatter-Plot
0
1
400 419.4
0.069 0.072
Histogram
0
1
400 433.4
0.069 0.077
Table 1. True and estimated parameters of the noise model for
the simulated noisy images and the three parametric
methods.
Table 1 summarizes the results obtained. When the 7 is known,
the scatter-plot method is more accurate than the other two meth
ods; thus, it has been chosen for the subsequent experiments con
cerning true data. Figures 4-6 show the plots from which the
noise parameters are retrieved. The size of the local windows in
which local statistics are measured is non-critical, at least in the
range 3 x 3 to 7 x 7, provided that the noise is white.
1200
(a)
2400
(b)
Fig. 6. Histograms of (normalized) local variances: (a) additive
Gaussian noise (7 = 0) with <y\ — 400; (b) speckle noise
(7 = 1) with = 0.017.
Concerning the bit-planes methods, since both of them lead
to a lower and an upper estimate, oi" ’ = 2 • oi\ of the stan
dard deviation of the noise, we have verified that the o u from the
scatter-plot method always lie between oi l) and cr[ u; if, starting
from the LSB, the last noisy bit-plane is retained.
5.2 Information Assessment
The test set comprises one Landsat TM image, with 8 bit/pel
and 6 bands out of 7. In fact, Band 6 (thermal infrared) was omit
ted mainly because of its poorer resolution (120m x 120m vs.
30m x 30m) and scarce spectral correlation with the other bands.
The test site, two bands of which are portrayed in Fig. 7 as ex
amples of visible and infrared observations, is in Italy: part of the
valley of river Adige, near Trento. Table 2 reports the estimated
parameters for the six bands, the first of which is encoded in in-
tra mode, i.e. without reference to any other previously encoded
band. To achieve an optimum multi-spectral de-correlation, the
different bands available were arranged to form a sequence that
maximizes the average cross-correlation between any couple of
consecutive bands (Wang, 1995). The optimum bidirectional se
quence, was found to be: 1 -» 3, 1 —» 2 4- 3, 3 —» 7, 4 4— 7,
4 —> 5 <— 7. The difference in rate between causal and non-
causal prediction is small, since the latter provides an improve
ment of four hundredths of bit for the optical bands and nearly
eight hundredths for the infrared channels (Aiazzi, 1999d).