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Evolving multispectral sensor configurations using genetic programming for estuary health monitoring.

Authors :
Rogers, Mitchell
Azhar, Mihailo
Schenone, Stefano
Thrush, Simon
Xue, Bing
Zhang, Mengjie
Delmas, Patrice
Source :
Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand. Aug2024, p1-31. 31p. 10 Illustrations.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Assessing ecosystem health on a large scale is crucial for a wide range of management and regulatory decisions. Technologies such as hyperspectral imaging allow noninvasive and rapid estimation of key attributes based on observed reflectance. However, these images are high-dimensional and real-world applications require models based on fewer wavelengths. This paper proposes a new wavelength selection and feature extraction method for hyperspectral image analysis based on genetic programming to automatically select key wavelength regions and informative image features. A dataset of hyperspectral images of sediment in the field was collected and paired with ground-truth measurements of the sediment porosity and organic matter content. Two new program structures were proposed to construct feature extraction trees from either the mean reflectance spectra (spectra-based) or full hyperspectral images (image-based). SVR models were constructed to predict attributes based on the extracted features. Various regression models were used to predict the porosity and organic matter content. Full-wavelength models were constructed to reliably predict the organic matter content. The proposed spectra-based genetic programming solutions show competitive results compared to common wavelength selection methods, such as SPA, CARS, and RC. Finally, the best-evolved solution was applied to predict sediment organic matter content across all collected images. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03036758
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179135698
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/03036758.2024.2393297