Hyperspectral Image Super-Resolution in Arbitrary Input-Output Band Settings
This addresses a practical limitation for users of hyperspectral imaging by enabling flexible super-resolution across diverse camera setups, though it is an incremental improvement over existing methods.
The paper tackles the problem of hyperspectral image super-resolution being limited to specific input-output band settings by proposing a single meta-learning-based model that can handle arbitrary band configurations, achieving results comparable to or better than models trained separately for each setting.
Hyperspectral image (HSI) with narrow spectral bands can capture rich spectral information, but it sacrifices its spatial resolution in the process. Many machine-learning-based HSI super-resolution (SR) algorithms have been proposed recently. However, one of the fundamental limitations of these approaches is that they are highly dependent on image and camera settings and can only learn to map an input HSI with one specific setting to an output HSI with another. However, different cameras capture images with different spectral response functions and bands numbers due to the diversity of HSI cameras. Consequently, the existing machine-learning-based approaches fail to learn to super-resolve HSIs for a wide variety of input-output band settings. We propose a single Meta-Learning-Based Super-Resolution (MLSR) model, which can take in HSI images at an arbitrary number of input bands' peak wavelengths and generate SR HSIs with an arbitrary number of output bands' peak wavelengths. We leverage NTIRE2020 and ICVL datasets to train and validate the performance of the MLSR model. The results show that the single proposed model can successfully generate super-resolved HSI bands at arbitrary input-output band settings. The results are better or at least comparable to baselines that are separately trained on a specific input-output band setting.