Hyperspectral image (HSI) super-resolution (SR) is an important technique for improving the spatial resolution of HSI. Recently, a method based on sparse representation improved the performance of HSI SR significantly. However, the spectral dictionary was learned under a fixed size, empirically, without considering the training data. Moreover, most of the existing methods fail to explore the relationship among the sparse coeffcients. To address these crucial issues, an effective method for HSI SR is proposed in this paper. First, a spectral dictionary is learned, which can adaptively estimate a suitable size according to the input HSI without any prior information. Then, the proposed method exploits the nonlocal correlation of the sparse coeffcients. Double l1 regularized sparse representation is then introduced to achieve better reconstructions for HSI SR. Finally, a high spatial resolution HSI is generated by the obtained coeffcients matrix and the learned adaptive size spectral dictionary. To evaluate the performance of the proposed method, we conduct experiments on two famous datasets. The experimental results demonstrate that it can outperform some relatively state-of-the-art methods in terms of the popular universal quality evaluation indexes.
CITATION STYLE
Tang, S., Xu, Y., Huang, L., & Sun, L. (2019). Hyperspectral Image Super-Resolution via Adaptive Dictionary Learning and Double l1 Constraint. Remote Sensing, 11(23). https://doi.org/10.3390/rs11232809
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