4 October 2012 Illumination invariance and shadow compensation via spectro-polarimetry technique
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Abstract
A major problem for obtaining target reflectance via hyperspectral imaging systems is the presence of illumination and shadow effects. These factors are common artefacts, especially when dealing with a hyperspectral imaging system that has sensors in the visible to near infrared region. This region is known to have highly scattered and diffuse radiance that can modify the energy recorded by the imaging system. A shadow effect will lower the target reflectance values due to the small radiant energy impinging on the target surface. Combined with illumination artefacts, such as diffuse scattering from the surrounding targets, background or environment, the shape of the shadowed target reflectance will be altered. We propose a new method to compensate for illumination and shadow effects on hyperspectral imageries by using a polarization technique. This technique, called spectro-polarimetry, estimates the direct and diffuse irradiance based on two images taken with and without a polarizer. The method is then evaluated using a spectral similarity measure, angle and distance metric. The results of indoor and outdoor tests have shown that using the spectro-polarimetry technique can improve the spectral constancy between shadow and full illumination spectra.
© 2012 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) 0091-3286/2012/$25.00 © 2012 SPIE
Izzati Ibrahim, Peter W. Yuen, Kan Hong, Tong Chen, Umair Soori, James Jackman, and Mark A. Richardson "Illumination invariance and shadow compensation via spectro-polarimetry technique," Optical Engineering 51(10), 107004 (4 October 2012). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.OE.51.10.107004
Published: 4 October 2012
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CITATIONS
Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Reflectivity

Hyperspectral imaging

Illumination engineering

Polarization

Polarizers

RGB color model

Imaging systems

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