Remote Sensing (May 2022)

Coupled Heterogeneous Tucker Decomposition: A Feature Extraction Method for Multisource Fusion and Domain Adaptation Using Multisource Heterogeneous Remote Sensing Data

  • Tong Gao,
  • Hao Chen,
  • Junhong Lu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14112553
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 11
p. 2553

Abstract

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To excavate adequately the rich information contained in multisource remote sensing data, feature extraction as basic yet important research has two typical applications: one of which is to extract complementary information of multisource data to improve classification; and the other is to extract shared information across sources for domain adaptation. However, typical feature extraction methods require the input represented as vectors or homogeneous tensors and fail to process multisource data represented as heterogeneous tensors. Therefore, the coupled heterogeneous Tucker decomposition (C-HTD) containing two sub-methods, namely coupled factor matrix-based HTD (CFM-HTD) and coupled core tensor-based HTD (CCT-HTD), is proposed to establish a unified feature extraction framework for multisource fusion and domain adaptation. To handle multisource heterogeneous tensors, multiple Tucker models were constructed to extract features of different sources separately. To cope with the supervised and semi-supervised cases, the class-indicator factor matrix was built to enhance the separability of features using known labels and learned labels. To mine the complementarity of paired multisource samples, coupling constraint was imposed on multiple factor matrices to form CFM-HTD to extract multisource information jointly. To extract domain-adapted features, coupling constraint was imposed on multiple core tensors to form CCT-HTD to encourage data from different sources to have the same class centroid. In addition, to reduce the impact of interference samples on domain adaptation, an adaptive sample-weighting matrix was designed to autonomously remove outliers. Using multiresolution multiangle optical and MSTAR datasets, experimental results show that the C-HTD outperforms typical multisource fusion and domain adaptation methods.

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