Compressing hyperspectral images (HSIs) into compact representations under the premise of ensuring high-quality reconstruction is an essential task in HSI processing. However, existing compression methods usually encode images by smoothing… Click to show full abstract
Compressing hyperspectral images (HSIs) into compact representations under the premise of ensuring high-quality reconstruction is an essential task in HSI processing. However, existing compression methods usually encode images by smoothing due to the low-frequency information occupying a prominent component in most images. Consequently, these methods fail to capture sufficient structural information, especially in low bit rates, often causing inferior reconstruction. To address this problem, we propose here an edge-guided hyperspectral compression network, called CENet, to realize high-quality reconstruction. To enhance the structural latent representation ability, the CENet model incorporates an edge extractor neural network into the compression architecture to guide compression optimization by the edge-guided loss. We propose an interactive dual attention module to selectively learn edge features, obtain the most effective edge structure, and avoid additional edge information redundancy at the same time. In the proposed CENet, the edge-guided loss and interactive dual attention module are combined to enhance the comprehensive structure of the latent representation. Concretely, interactive dual attention makes the edge extraction network focus only on moderate boundaries rather than on all edges, which enables savings on the bit rate cost and helps achieve a strong structural representation. As a result, the reconstruction quality is significantly improved. The extensive experiments on seven HSI datasets verify that our model can effectively raise the rate–distortion performance for HSIs of any type or resolution (e.g., yielding an average peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) of 30.59 dB at 0.2382 bpppb, which exceeds the baseline for Chikusei by 10.99%).
               
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