A Biologically Interpretable Two-stage Deep Neural Network (BIT-DNN) For Hyperspectral Imagery Classification
Spectral-spatial based deep learning models have recently proven to be effective in hyperspectral image (HSI) classification for various earth monitoring applications such as land cover classification and agricultural monitoring. However, due to the nature of "black-box" model representation, how to explain and interpret the learning process and the model decision remains an open problem. This study proposes an interpretable deep learning model – a biologically interpretable two-stage deep neural network (BIT-DNN), by integrating biochemical and biophysical associated information into the proposed framework, capable of achieving both high accuracy and interpretability on HSI based classification tasks. The proposed model introduces a two-stage feature learning process. In the first stage, an enhanced interpretable feature block extracts low-level spectral features associated with the biophysical and biochemical attributes of the target entities; and in the second stage, an interpretable capsule block extracts and encapsulates the high-level joint spectral-spatial features into the featured tensors representing the hierarchical structure of the biophysical and biochemical attributes of the target ground entities, which provides the model an improved performance on classification and intrinsic interpretability. We have tested and evaluated the model using two real HSI datasets for crop type recognition and crop disease recognition tasks and compared it with six state-of-the-art machine learning models. The results demonstrate that the proposed model has competitive advantages in terms of both classification accuracy and model interpretability.
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