IVCVMay 20

HyperBench: Standardizing and Scaling Synthetic Evaluation for Hyperspectral Super-Resolution

arXiv:2605.2167118.4Has Code
AI Analysis

For researchers in hyperspectral super-resolution, HyperBench enables reproducible and comprehensive cross-method comparison, addressing the lack of standardization in synthetic evaluation.

HyperBench standardizes synthetic evaluation for hyperspectral super-resolution by providing a unified framework with diverse degradation configurations. Using it to evaluate six methods across 70 configurations reveals that inter-method PSNR spread widens from ~5 dB on the easiest PSF to >13 dB on the hardest, exposing fragility invisible in single-configuration evaluations.

Hyperspectral super-resolution (HSR) reconstructs a high-spatial-resolution hyperspectral image by fusing a low-resolution hyperspectral image (LR-HSI) with a high-resolution multispectral image (HR-MSI). In the absence of real-world paired data, HSR methods are evaluated almost exclusively on synthetic experiments derived from hyperspectral datasets through Wald's protocol. Despite the protocol's widespread adoption, its practical implementation varies markedly across research works, typically relying on a single (usually Gaussian) or very few point spread functions (PSFs), one or two spectral response functions (SRFs), and a couple of spatial downsampling factors. As a result, reported performance figures are difficult to compare across the literature, in addition to being often difficult to reproduce; furthermore, they may not generalize across realistic sensing conditions. We introduce HyperBench, a unified and extensible framework that standardizes synthetic experimentation for HSR. HyperBench supports diverse degradation configurations spanning ten PSFs, four SRFs derived from operational multispectral sensors, configurable spatial downsampling factors, and matched additive white Gaussian noise; its goal is to automate large-scale evaluation and structured logging. By decoupling model development from experimental design, the framework enables reproducible, apples-to-apples cross-method comparison with minimal friction. We use HyperBench to evaluate six recently proposed HSR methods across a 70-configuration sweep on four widely used hyperspectral scenes and observe that the inter-method PSNR spread widens from approximately 5 dB on the easiest PSF to over 13 dB on the hardest - a fragility that is structurally invisible to the prevailing single-configuration evaluation protocol. HyperBench code is available at https://github.com/ritikgshah/HyperBench .

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes