@ARTICLE\{IMM2014-06678, author = "D. Rogge and M. Bachmann and B. Rivard and A. A. Nielsen and J. Feng", title = "A Spatial-Spectral Approach for Deriving High Signal Quality Eigenvectors for Remote Sensing Image Transformations", year = "2014", month = "feb", keywords = "Hyperspectral imaging; spatial and spectral processing; eigenvector transformations", pages = "387-398", journal = "International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation", volume = "26", editor = "", number = "", publisher = "Elsevier", url = "http://www2.compute.dtu.dk/pubdb/pubs/6678-full.html", abstract = "Spectral decorrelation (transformations) methods have long been used in remote sensing. Transformation of the image data onto eigenvectors that comprise physically meaningful spectral properties (signal) can be used to reduce the dimensionality of hyperspectral images as the number of spectrally distinct signal sources composing a given hyperspectral scene is generally much less than the number of spectral bands. Determining eigenvectors dominated by signal variance as opposed to noise is a difficult task. Problems also arise in using these transformations on large images, multiple flight-line surveys, or temporal data sets as computational burden becomes significant. In this paper we present a spatial-spectral approach to deriving high signal quality eigenvectors for image transformations which possess an inherently ability to reduce the effects of noise. The approach applies a spatial and spectral subsampling to the data, which is accomplished by deriving a limited set of eigenvectors for spatially contiguous subsets. These subset eigenvectors are compiled together to form a new noise reduced data set, which is subsequently used to derive a set of global orthogonal eigenvectors. Data from two hyperspectral surveys are used to demonstrate that the approach can significantly speed up eigenvector derivation, successfully be applied to multiple flight-line surveys or multi-temporal data sets, derive a representative eigenvector set for the full image data set, and lastly, improve the separation of those eigenvectors representing signal as opposed to noise.", isbn_issn = "DOI:10.1016/j.jag.2013.09.007" }