6533b7d5fe1ef96bd1263ddc

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Improved Statistically Based Retrievals via Spatial-Spectral Data Compression for IASI Data

Valero LaparraJoaquin Garcia-sobrinoXavier CalbetJoan Serra-sagristaGustau Camps-valls

subject

Computer scienceInfrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer (IASI)Spectral Transforms0211 other engineering and technologies02 engineering and technologyData_CODINGANDINFORMATIONTHEORYLossy compressionInfrared atmospheric sounding interferometer (IASI)Kernel MethodsElectrical and Electronic EngineeringTransform coding021101 geological & geomatics engineeringbusiness.industryDimensionality reductionLossy CompressionJPEG 2000Kernel methodsPattern recognitioncomputer.file_formatJoint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) 2000RegressionUncompressed videoSpectral transformsKernel methodStatistically based retrievalJPEG 2000General Earth and Planetary SciencesLossy compressionArtificial intelligencebusinessStatistically Based RetrievalcomputerSmoothing

description

In this paper, we analyze the effect of spatial and spectral compression on the performance of statistically based retrieval. Although the quality of the information is not com- pletely preserved during the coding process, experiments reveal that a certain amount of compression may yield a positive impact on the accuracy of retrievals. We unveil two strategies, both with interesting benefits: either to apply a very high compression, which still maintains the same retrieval performance as that obtained for uncompressed data; or to apply a moderate to high compression, which improves the performance. As a second contribution of this paper, we focus on the origins of these benefits. On the one hand, we show that a certain amount of noise is removed during the compression stage, which benefits the retrievals performance. On the other hand, we analyze the effect of compression on spectral/spatial regularization (smoothing). We quantify the amount of information shared among the spatial neighbors for the different methods and compression ratios. We also propose a simple strategy to specifically exploit spectral and spatial relations and find that, when these relations are taken into account beforehand, the benefits of compression are reduced. These experiments suggest that compression can be understood as an indirect way to regularize the data and exploit spatial neighbors information, which improves the performance of pixelwise statistics-based retrieval algorithms.

10.1109/tgrs.2019.2901396http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TGRS.2019.2901396