Mohammad Aghagolzadeh

2papers

2 Papers

CVAug 2, 2015
On Hyperspectral Classification in the Compressed Domain

Mohammad Aghagolzadeh, Hayder Radha

In this paper, we study the problem of hyperspectral pixel classification based on the recently proposed architectures for compressive whisk-broom hyperspectral imagers without the need to reconstruct the complete data cube. A clear advantage of classification in the compressed domain is its suitability for real-time on-site processing of the sensed data. Moreover, it is assumed that the training process also takes place in the compressed domain, thus, isolating the classification unit from the recovery unit at the receiver's side. We show that, perhaps surprisingly, using distinct measurement matrices for different pixels results in more accuracy of the learned classifier and consistent classification performance, supporting the role of information diversity in learning.

CVAug 2, 2015
Dictionary and Image Recovery from Incomplete and Random Measurements

Mohammad Aghagolzadeh, Hayder Radha

This paper tackles algorithmic and theoretical aspects of dictionary learning from incomplete and random block-wise image measurements and the performance of the adaptive dictionary for sparse image recovery. This problem is related to blind compressed sensing in which the sparsifying dictionary or basis is viewed as an unknown variable and subject to estimation during sparse recovery. However, unlike existing guarantees for a successful blind compressed sensing, our results do not rely on additional structural constraints on the learned dictionary or the measured signal. In particular, we rely on the spatial diversity of compressive measurements to guarantee that the solution is unique with a high probability. Moreover, our distinguishing goal is to measure and reduce the estimation error with respect to the ideal dictionary that is based on the complete image. Using recent results from random matrix theory, we show that applying a slightly modified dictionary learning algorithm over compressive measurements results in accurate estimation of the ideal dictionary for large-scale images. Empirically, we experiment with both space-invariant and space-varying sensing matrices and demonstrate the critical role of spatial diversity in measurements. Simulation results confirm that the presented algorithm outperforms the typical non-adaptive sparse recovery based on offline-learned universal dictionaries.