Assessment of accuracy : systematic reduction of training points for maximum likelihood classification and mixture discriminant analysis (Gaussian and t-distribution)

Date
2018-09
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
CONSAS Conference
Abstract
Remote sensing provides a valuable tool for monitoring land cover across large areas of land. A simple yet popular method for land cover classification is Maximum Likelihood Classification (MLC), which assumes a single normal distribution of the samples per class in the feature space. Mixture Discriminant Analysis (MDA) is a natural extension of MLC which can be used with varying distributions and multiple distributions per class, which simplifies the classification process tremendously. We compare the accuracies of MLC and MDA (using a Gaussian and t-distribution) as the number of training points are systematically reduced in order to simulate varying reference data availability conditions. The results show that the more robust t-distribution MDA performs comparatively with the Gaussian MDA and that both outperform MLC when sufficient training points are available. As the number of training points increases the MDA accuracies increase while the MLC accuracy stagnates. At very low numbers of training samples (ranging from 22 to 169 dependent on the class), there is more variability in terms of which method performs best.
Description
The original publication is available at http://sajg.org.za
CITATION: Ritchie, M. et al. 2018. Assessment of accuracy : systematic reduction of training points for maximum likelihood classification and mixture discriminant analysis (Gaussian and t-distribution). South African Journal of Geomatics, 7(2):132-146, doi:10.4314/sajg.v7i2.3.
Keywords
Remote sensing, Image processing -- Digital techniques, Gauge theory (Physics), Gaussian processes, Machine learning -- Mathematical models
Citation
Ritchie, M. et al. 2018. Assessment of accuracy : systematic reduction of training points for maximum likelihood classification and mixture discriminant analysis (Gaussian and t-distribution). South African Journal of Geomatics, 7(2):132-146, doi:10.4314/sajg.v7i2.3.