摘要

Land use and land cover classification is an important application of remote-sensing images. The performances of most classification models are largely limited by the incompleteness of the calibration set and the complexity of spectral features. It is difficult for models to realize continuous learning when the study area is transferred or enlarged. This paper proposed an adaptive unimodal subclass decomposition (AUSD) learning system, which comprises two-level iterative learning controls: The inner loop separates each class into several unimodal Gaussian subclasses; the outer loop utilizes transfer learning to extend the model to adapt to supplementary calibration set collected from enlarged study areas. The proposed model can be efficiently adjusted according to the variability of spectral signatures caused by the increasingly high-resolution imagery. The classification result can be obtained using the Gaussian mixture model by Bayesian decision theory. This AUSD learning system was validated using simulated data with the Gaussian distribution and multi-area SPOT-5 high-resolution images with 2.5-m resolution. The experimental results on numerical data demonstrated the ability of continuous learning. The proposed method achieved an overall accuracy of over 90% in all the experiments, validating the effectiveness as well as its superiority over several widely used classification methods.