Joint Superpixel and Self-Representation Learning for Scalable Hyperspectral Image Clustering
This work addresses computational bottlenecks in hyperspectral image analysis for remote sensing applications, though it is incremental in combining existing techniques.
The paper tackled the scalability and misalignment issues in hyperspectral image clustering by proposing a joint optimization framework for superpixel segmentation and subspace clustering, achieving superior accuracy on benchmark datasets.
Subspace clustering is a powerful unsupervised approach for hyperspectral image (HSI) analysis, but its high computational and memory costs limit scalability. Superpixel segmentation can improve efficiency by reducing the number of data points to process. However, existing superpixel-based methods usually perform segmentation independently of the clustering task, often producing partitions that do not align with the subsequent clustering objective. To address this, we propose a unified end-to-end framework that jointly optimizes superpixel segmentation and subspace clustering. Its core is a feedback mechanism: a self-representation network based on unfolded Alternating Direction Method of Multipliers (ADMM) provides a model-driven signal to guide a differentiable superpixel module. This joint optimization yields clustering-aware partitions that preserve both spectral and spatial structure. Furthermore, our superpixel network learns a unique compactness parameter for each superpixel, enabling more flexible and adaptive segmentation. Extensive experiments on benchmark HSI datasets demonstrate that our method consistently achieves superior accuracy compared with state-of-the-art clustering approaches.