Wald's protocol is the most widely accepted protocol to assess pan-sharpening algorithms. In particular, the synthesis property-which is usually validated on a reduced scale-is thought to be a necessary and sufficient condition of a success image fusion. Usually, the synthesis property is evaluated at a reduced resolution scale to take the original multispectral (MS) image as reference; thus, the image degradation method that is employed to produce reduced resolution images is crucial. In the past decade, the standard method has been to decimate the low-pass-filtered image where the filter is designed to match the modulation transfer function (MTF) of the sensor. The paper pointed out the deficiency of the method, and proposed a new image degradation method, referred to as method of spatial degradation for fusion validation (MSD4FV), which takes MTF compensation into account based on a simplified MTF model. The simulation results supported the implicit assumption ofWald's protocol that image fusion performance is invariant among scales if the images have been properly degraded.
CITATION STYLE
Dou, W. (2018, January 1). Image degradation for quality assessment of pan-sharpening methods. Remote Sensing. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs10010154
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