• Spectroscopy and Spectral Analysis
  • Vol. 41, Issue 9, 2911 (2021)
Zi-han ZHANG1、*, Lei YAN1、1; 2;, Si-yuan LIU1、1;, Yu FU1、1;, Kai-wen JIANG1、1;, Bin YANG3、3;, Sui-hua LIU4、4;, and Fei-zhou ZHANG1、1; *;
Author Affiliations
  • 11. Beijing Key Lab of Spatial Information Integration and 3S Application, Institute of Remote Sensing and Geographic Information System, School of Earth and Space Science, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China
  • 33. College of Electrical and Information Engineering, Hunan University, Changsha 410082, China
  • 44. School of Geography and Environmental Science, Guizhou Normal University, Guiyang 550001, China
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    DOI: 10.3964/j.issn.1000-0593(2021)09-2911-07 Cite this Article
    Zi-han ZHANG, Lei YAN, Si-yuan LIU, Yu FU, Kai-wen JIANG, Bin YANG, Sui-hua LIU, Fei-zhou ZHANG. Leaf Nitrogen Concentration Retrieval Based on Polarization Reflectance Model and Random Forest Regression[J]. Spectroscopy and Spectral Analysis, 2021, 41(9): 2911 Copy Citation Text show less

    Abstract

    Leaf nitrogen concentration is of great significance in the vegetation biochemistry process. Airborne hyperspectral data is widely utilized to retrieve leaf nitrogen concentration. Since the current algorithms cannot completely fulfill the accuracy requirement of precision agriculture, it is urgent to improve the retrieval accuracy of leaf nitrogen concentration. The accuracy of leaf nitrogen concentration retrieval is restricted by principle error and algorithm error. The principle error is generated in the process of specular reflection at the leaf surface. The radiant energy detected by sensors consists of a specular components and multiple scattering components. Solely the multiple scattering component carries vegetation biochemistry information (leaf nitrogen concentration, for instance). The specular component represents the energy reflected directly at the foliar wax layer, thus carries no inner information of the leaf. Based on the Fresnel formula, the specular component is partially polarized, and the multiple scattering component is unpolarized. Therefore, the principle error can be eliminated by the specular reflectance estimate, particularly with the aid of polarization reflectance modelling. The algorithm error is derived from the difference of airborne hyperspectral data mining capability between different algorithms. The performance of Partial Least Squares Regression, Principal Component Regression, Support Vector Regression, K-Nearest Neighbor Regression and Random Forest Regression are systematically compared in this research, and ultimately Random Forest Regression is chosen to reduce the algorithm error. In this research, in order to estimate the polarization reflectance of broadleaf and needle vegetation, multispectral data gained by POLDER/PARASOL satellite (equipped with multi-angle polarization sensors) are used to establish Bidirectional Polarization Distribution Function model. Hyperspectral data gained by the HySpex sensor system is used to conduct high-precision retrieval of leaf nitrogen concentration. Root Mean Square Error is taken as a major evaluation index. The conclusion is: After eliminating polarization reflectance in hyperspectral data, an average accuracy improvement of 4.244% is achieved among the above algorithms. Random Forest Regression is rather competitive by reaching 13.103% improvement in accuracy (RSQ 0.803, RMSE 0.252), which indicates that Random Forest is sensitive to polarization information. Compared to the basic method (Partial Least Squares Regression), the accuracy is improved by 32.440% after eliminating principle error and reducing algorithm error. In our research, the high-accuracy retrieval of leaf nitrogen concentration is realized, proving the significance of eliminating polarization reflectance and indicates the potential of random forest regression in hyperspectral remote sensing retrieval.
    Zi-han ZHANG, Lei YAN, Si-yuan LIU, Yu FU, Kai-wen JIANG, Bin YANG, Sui-hua LIU, Fei-zhou ZHANG. Leaf Nitrogen Concentration Retrieval Based on Polarization Reflectance Model and Random Forest Regression[J]. Spectroscopy and Spectral Analysis, 2021, 41(9): 2911
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