“…However, apart from the spectral information captured by hyperspectral sensors, it complements the data information collected by traditional sensors, such as RGB cameras. These kinds of sensors have improved over the last decade by reductions in their cost and increases in imaging speed, which in turn has opened up hyperspectral imaging to other applications, and making it more popular than ever in recent decades [ 5 , 6 ]. Hyperspectral imaging is widely used for a large variety of applications such as precision agriculture, forestry, city planning, urban surveillance and homeland security, chemistry, forensic examination and face recognition.…”