Sign in
Author
|
Conference
|
Journal
|
Organization
|
Year
|
DOI
Look for results that meet for the following criteria:
since
equal to
before
between
and
Search in all fields of study
Limit my searches in the following fields of study
Agriculture Science
Arts & Humanities
Biology
Chemistry
Computer Science
Economics & Business
Engineering
Environmental Sciences
Geosciences
Material Science
Mathematics
Medicine
Physics
Social Science
Multidisciplinary
Keywords
(24)
Data Collection
Earth Observation
Estimation Error
Field Data
Geographic Information System
Infrared
Infrared Imaging
Land Use
Long Term Ecological Research
Monte Carlo
Plant Growth
Remote Sensing
Semiarid Region
Spatial and Temporal Variation
Spatial Heterogeneity
Spectral Mixture Analysis
Spectral Reflectance
Spectral Unmixing
Spectrum
Vegetation Cover
Bare Soil
Green Vegetation
Leaf Area
South America
Related Publications
(7)
Biophysical and Biochemical Sources of Variability in Canopy Reflectance
Detecting vegetation leaf water content using reflectance in the optical domain
Imaging Spectros...
A comparison of methods for monitoring multitemporal vegetation change using Thematic Mapper imagery
Optical–Bi...
Subscribe
Academic
Publications
A Biogeophysical Approach for Automated SWIR Unmixing of Soils and Vegetation
A Biogeophysical Approach for Automated SWIR Unmixing of Soils and Vegetation,10.1016/S0034-4257(00)00126-7,Remote Sensing of Environment,Gregory P. A
Edit
A Biogeophysical Approach for Automated SWIR Unmixing of Soils and Vegetation
(
Citations: 100
)
BibTex
|
RIS
|
RefWorks
Download
Gregory P. Asner
,
David B. Lobell
Arid and semiarid ecosystems endure strong
spatial and temporal variation
of climate and
land use
that results in uniquely dynamic vegetation phenology, cover, and
leaf area
characteristics. Previous
remote sensing
efforts have not fully captured the
spatial heterogeneity
of vegetation properties required for functional analyses of these ecosystems, or have done so only with manually intensive algorithms of
spectral mixture analysis
that have limited operational use. These limitations motivated the development of an automated
spectral unmixing
approach based on a comprehensive analysis of vegetation and soil spectral variability resulting from biogeophysical variation in arid and semiarid regions. A field spectroscopic database of bare soils, green canopies, and litter canopies was compiled for 17 arid and semiarid sites in North and South America, representing a wide array of
plant growth
forms and species, vegetation conditions, and soil mineralogical-hydrological properties.
Spectral reflectance
of dominant cover types (green vegetation, litter, and bare soil) varied widely within and between sites, but the reflectance derivatives in the shortwave-infrared (SWIR2: 2,100–2,400 nm) were similar within and separable between each cover type. Using this result, an automated SWIR2
spectral unmixing
algorithm was developed that includes a
Monte Carlo
approach for estimating errors in derived subpixel cover fractions resulting from endmember variability. The algorithm was applied to SWIR2 spectral data collected by the Airborne Visible and
Infrared Imaging
Spectrometer instrument over the Sevilleta and Jornada Long-Term Ecological Research sites. Subsequent comparisons to
field data
and geographical
information system
(GIS) maps were deemed successful. The SWIR2 region of the reflected solar
spectrum
provides a robust means to estimate the extent of
bare soil
and vegetation covers in arid and semiarid regions. The computationally efficient method developed here could be extended globally using SWIR2 spectrometer data to be collected from platforms such as the NASA Earth Observing-1 satellite.
Journal:
Remote Sensing of Environment - REMOTE SENS ENVIRON
, vol. 74, no. 1, pp. 99-112, 2000
DOI:
10.1016/S0034-4257(00)00126-7
Cumulative
Annual
View Publication
The following links allow you to view full publications. These links are maintained by other sources not affiliated with Microsoft Academic Search.
(
www.sciencedirect.com
)
(
linkinghub.elsevier.com
)
(
eco.ib.usp.br
)
Citation Context
(36)
...Because of its effectiveness in handling the spectral mixture problem, LSMA has been widely used in estimation of vegetation cover [
30
]‐[32], in land-cover classification and change detection [33], [34], and in urban studies [35], [36]...
Qihao Weng
,
et al.
Modeling Urban Heat Islands and Their Relationship With Impervious Sur...
...Several robust algorithms have been developed for measuring NPV from remote sensing data [
14
], [15]...
...Remote sensing methods for estimating vegetation structure are well established [
14
], [15], [38], and inverse modeling studies have demonstrated the dominance of the vegetation structure in influencing the canopy reflectance spectra [16]...
...Robust models exist for estimating vegetation structure from remote sensing data, including methods that are less sensitive to sensor noise at wavelengths >1800 nm and that actually benefit from foliar water absorptions in this spectral range (e.g., [
14
] and [48])...
Andrew J. Elmore
,
et al.
Spectroscopic Analysis of Canopy Nitrogen and Nitrogen Isotopes in Man...
...Asner and Lobell [
9
] applied spectrum derivation to decrease the negative effect of endmember spectral variability...
...Both of the two methods proposed in [
9
] and [10] failed in definite physical explanations...
Jing Jin
,
et al.
A Novel Approach Based on Fisher Discriminant Null Space for Decomposi...
... Therefore, SMA began to be used in the researches of vegetation cover in urban areas gradually [
5
] ,...
...According to formula (
5
), formula (4) could be written in this way:...
Zhi-qiang Guo
,
et al.
Urban vegetation coverage information extraction based on improved lin...
...The use of a soil reflectance model, combined with spectral mixture analysis [
8
], provides the opportunity to unmix the heterogeneous pixels extracting the signal that solely originates from the vegetation component [4]...
P. Coppin
.
Soil reflectance modeling & hyperspectral mixture analysis: Towards ve...
References
(26)
Biophysical and Biochemical Sources of Variability in Canopy Reflectance
(
Citations: 250
)
Gregory P. Asner
Journal:
Remote Sensing of Environment - REMOTE SENS ENVIRON
, vol. 64, no. 3, pp. 234-253, 1998
Ecological Research Needs from Multiangle Remote Sensing Data
(
Citations: 63
)
Gregory P Asner
,
B. H Braswell
,
David S Schimel
,
Carol A Wessman
Journal:
Remote Sensing of Environment - REMOTE SENS ENVIRON
, vol. 63, no. 2, pp. 155-165, 1998
Heterogeneity of Savanna Canopy Structure and Function from Imaging Spectrometry and Inverse Modeling
(
Citations: 32
)
Gregory P. Asner
,
Carol A. Wessman
,
David S. Schimel
Journal:
Ecological Applications - ECOL APPL
, vol. 8, no. 4, pp. 1022-1036, 1998
On the relation between NDVI, fractional vegetation cover, and leaf area index
(
Citations: 264
)
Toby N. Carlson
,
David A. Ripley
Journal:
Remote Sensing of Environment - REMOTE SENS ENVIRON
, vol. 62, no. 3, pp. 241-252, 1997
Remote sensing of foliar chemistry
(
Citations: 274
)
P. J. Curran
Journal:
Remote Sensing of Environment - REMOTE SENS ENVIRON
, vol. 30, no. 3, pp. 271-278, 1989
Sort by:
Citations
(100)
Dynamics of vegetation indices in tropical and subtropical savannas defined by ecoregions and Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) land cover
Michael J. Hill
,
Miguel O. Román
,
Crystal B. Schaaf
Journal:
Geocarto International
, vol. 27, no. 2, pp. 153-191, 2012
Spatial Variation and Geographic-Demographic Determinants of Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrests in the City-State of Singapore
(
Citations: 1
)
Marcus Eng Hock Ong
,
Arul Earnest
,
Nur Shahidah
,
Wen Min Ng
,
Chuanyang Foo
,
David John Nott
Journal:
Annals of Emergency Medicine - ANN EMERG MED
, vol. 58, no. 4, pp. 343-351, 2011
Poster 130 Sustained Efficacy of IncobotulinumtoxinA (XEOMIN; botulinum neurotoxin type A, free from accessory proteins) in Cervical Dystonia Demonstrated by Investigator and Patient-rated Outcomes
Dirk Dressler
,
Bernd Gebhardt
,
Andrea Kupsch
,
Sebastian Paus
,
Andrea Seitzinger
Journal:
Pm&r
, vol. 3, no. 10, pp. S214-S215, 2011
401 Interpreting Red Blood Cells in Lumbar Puncture: Distinguishing True Subarachnoid Hemorrhage From Traumatic Tap
A. D. Czuczman
,
L. E. Thomas
,
A. B. Boulanger
,
D. F. Brown
,
K. A. Marill
Journal:
Annals of Emergency Medicine - ANN EMERG MED
, vol. 58, no. 4, pp. S314-S315, 2011
Modeling Urban Heat Islands and Their Relationship With Impervious Surface and Vegetation Abundance by Using ASTER Images
Qihao Weng
,
Umamaheshwaran Rajasekar
,
Xuefei Hu
Journal:
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing - IEEE TRANS GEOSCI REMOT SEN
, vol. 49, no. 10, pp. 4080-4089, 2011