10
5

Hyperspectral Image Compression Using Implicit Neural Representation

Abstract

Hyperspectral images, which record the electromagnetic spectrum for a pixel in the image of a scene, often store hundreds of channels per pixel and contain an order of magnitude more information than a typical similarly-sized color image. Consequently, concomitant with the decreasing cost of capturing these images, there is a need to develop efficient techniques for storing, transmitting, and analyzing hyperspectral images. This paper develops a method for hyperspectral image compression using implicit neural representations where a multilayer perceptron network Φθ\Phi_\theta with sinusoidal activation functions ``learns'' to map pixel locations to pixel intensities for a given hyperspectral image II. Φθ\Phi_\theta thus acts as a compressed encoding of this image. The original image is reconstructed by evaluating Φθ\Phi_\theta at each pixel location. We have evaluated our method on four benchmarks -- Indian Pines, Cuprite, Pavia University, and Jasper Ridge -- and we show the proposed method achieves better compression than JPEG, JPEG2000, and PCA-DCT at low bitrates.

View on arXiv
Comments on this paper