10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not enough content to warrant the high price, August 18, 2006
This updated edition of the digital image processing text geared towards satellite-derived remotely sensed data has some good content, but like previous editions it is much too expensive for what you ultimately receive. For general digital image processing and its algorithms I really think that "Digital Image Processing" by Gonzalez and Woods provides much more quality for a lower price. Granted, this book has some GIS specific information in it that other books don't have, but I don't think that this warrants the huge price tag. The presentation is not particularly compelling either. Quite a bit of room is taken up with large tables and sample imagery rather than instruction and algorithm details. I would really suggest that someone interested in the specific problems of processing satellite imagery look at some of the online resources for the pre-processing issues unique to this field, and then look at the Gonzalez and Woods book for a much better explanation of digital image processing in general, including the pattern recognition issues of the later chapters of this book that I think are particularly poorly explained. The table of contents is as follows:
1. Remote Sensing and Digital Image Processing
2. Remote Sensing Data Collection
3. Digital Image Processing Hardware and Software Considerations
4. Image Quality Assessment and Statistical Evaluation
5. Initial Display Alternatives and Scientific Visualization
6. Electromagnetic Radiation Principles and Radiometric Correction
7. Geometric Correction
8. Image Enhancement
9. Thematic Information Extraction: Pattern Recognition
10. Information Extraction Using Artificial Intelligence
11. Thematic Information Extraction: Hyperspectral Image Analysis
12. Digital Change Detection
13. Thematic Map Accuracy Assessment
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Very Thorough Overview!, December 28, 2011
I am reading this book as a recommended text for a graduate level course on remote sensing. This is honestly one of the more thorough textbooks I've ever read. I'm relatively new to the field of remote sensing, and the author does an excellent job of presenting both theory and applied tools. This is an introductory book, so don't expect extreme detail or in-depth case studies in any one area. But in total, a thorough and interesting discussion on major relevant topics are presented with numerous examples and very helpful explanations. The book frequently discusses the various remote sensing software applications (I'm using ENVI in my course), and it's very nice to see theory and principles tied directly to the analysis I'm actually doing.
Also- the book has a lot of graphics, charts, tables, etc that can be skipped or read in-depth to better understand the topics being discussed. A lot of the figures are in black and white, which is a drawback, but not one that I found warranted any substantial negative feedback. There is a high quality color photo insert section in the middle of the book with more visually appealing images.
In short- Thorough and engaging introduction to the field with a nice balance of theory and practical/applied info. Lots of examples, pictures, and figures that reinforce the topics presented.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Nice book, March 16, 2010
In my point of view, it is a nicely balanced book and gives an essential overview of the topic. Normally, I don't read book comprehensively like one page by one page, but this one is really worth reading. In my experience, I have never got bored with going over the chapters and obtained some valuable insights and tips. If you don't know the topic very well, this is the one you can get fundamentals from.
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