Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
The following issues relate to quality assessment of image classification: the classification methods as such, the methods to evaluate the classification results, and the requirements of the application. In this paper, a number of evaluation methods are reviewed, and it is concluded that those based on confusion matrices and the KHAT analysis are the most suited if one is interested in comparing classifiers. The novelty of this paper is that much attention is given to the subjectivity present in every evaluation scheme, and that the concept of accuracy is extended to quality by creating the link between accuracy, objectives, and costs. A protocol is proposed for quality assessment related to the economical reality. An example based on a hypothetical data set shows that the economic cost of misclassification can be high, and that it may be advantageous for the user to reconsider either the objectives, the type of data used, or other aspects of the remote-sensing system that he uses to produce the map.
Smits et al. (Fri,) studied this question.