Impact of Cluster Sampling on the Classification of Landsat 8 Remote Sensing Imagery

Author(s):  
Vikash Kumar Mishra ◽  
Triloki Pant
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 58
Author(s):  
Muhammad Fawad Akbar Khan ◽  
Khan Muhammad ◽  
Shahid Bashir ◽  
Shahab Ud Din ◽  
Muhammad Hanif

Low-resolution Geological Survey of Pakistan (GSP) maps surrounding the region of interest show oolitic and fossiliferous limestone occurrences correspondingly in Samanasuk, Lockhart, and Margalla hill formations in the Hazara division, Pakistan. Machine-learning algorithms (MLAs) have been rarely applied to multispectral remote sensing data for differentiating between limestone formations formed due to different depositional environments, such as oolitic or fossiliferous. Unlike the previous studies that mostly report lithological classification of rock types having different chemical compositions by the MLAs, this paper aimed to investigate MLAs’ potential for mapping subclasses within the same lithology, i.e., limestone. Additionally, selecting appropriate data labels, training algorithms, hyperparameters, and remote sensing data sources were also investigated while applying these MLAs. In this paper, first, oolitic (Samanasuk), fossiliferous (Lockhart and Margalla) limestone-bearing formations along with the adjoining Hazara formation were mapped using random forest (RF), support vector machine (SVM), classification and regression tree (CART), and naïve Bayes (NB) MLAs. The RF algorithm reported the best accuracy of 83.28% and a Kappa coefficient of 0.78. To further improve the targeted allochemical limestone formation map, annotation labels were generated by the fusion of maps obtained from principal component analysis (PCA), decorrelation stretching (DS), X-means clustering applied to ASTER-L1T, Landsat-8, and Sentinel-2 datasets. These labels were used to train and validate SVM, CART, NB, and RF MLAs to obtain a binary classification map of limestone occurrences in the Hazara division, Pakistan using the Google Earth Engine (GEE) platform. The classification of Landsat-8 data by CART reported 99.63% accuracy, with a Kappa coefficient of 0.99, and was in good agreement with the field validation. This binary limestone map was further classified into oolitic (Samanasuk) and fossiliferous (Lockhart and Margalla) formations by all the four MLAs; in this case, RF surpassed all the other algorithms with an improved accuracy of 96.36%. This improvement can be attributed to better annotation, resulting in a binary limestone classification map, which formed a mask for improved classification of oolitic and fossiliferous limestone in the area.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 456
Author(s):  
Weiying Xie ◽  
Jian Yang ◽  
Yunsong Li ◽  
Jie Lei ◽  
Jiaping Zhong ◽  
...  

Cloud detection is a significant preprocessing step for increasing the exploitability of remote sensing imagery that faces various levels of difficulty due to the complexity of underlying surfaces, insufficient training data, and redundant information in high-dimensional data. To solve these problems, we propose an unsupervised network for cloud detection (UNCD) on multispectral (MS) and hyperspectral (HS) remote sensing images. The UNCD method enforces discriminative feature learning to obtain the residual error between the original input and the background in deep latent space, which is based on the observation that clouds are sparse and modeled as sparse outliers in remote sensing imagery. The UNCD enforces discriminative feature learning to obtain the residual error between the original input and the background in deep latent space, which is based on the observation that clouds are sparse and modeled as sparse outliers in remote sensing imagery. First, a compact representation of the original imagery is obtained by a latent adversarial learning constrained encoder. Meanwhile, the majority class with sufficient samples (i.e., background pixels) is more accurately reconstructed than the clouds with limited samples by the decoder. An image discriminator is used to prevent the generalization of out-of-class features caused by latent adversarial learning. To further highlight the background information in the deep latent space, a multivariate Gaussian distribution is introduced. In particular, the residual error with clouds highlighted and background samples suppressed is applied in the cloud detection in deep latent space. To evaluate the performance of the proposed UNCD method, experiments were conducted on both MS and HS datasets that were captured by various sensors over various scenes, and the results demonstrate its state-of-the-art performance. The sensors that captured the datasets include Landsat 8, GaoFen-1 (GF-1), and GaoFen-5 (GF-5). Landsat 8 was launched at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on 11 February 2013, in a mission that was initially known as the Landsat Data Continuity Mission (LDCM). China launched the GF-1 satellite. The GF-5 satellite captures hyperspectral observations in the Chinese Key Projects of High-Resolution Earth Observation System. The overall accuracy (OA) values for Images I and II from the Landsat 8 dataset were 0.9526 and 0.9536, respectively, and the OA values for Images III and IV from the GF-1 wide field of view (WFV) dataset were 0.9957 and 0.9934, respectively. Hence, the proposed method outperformed the other considered methods.


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