Research on cropping intensity mapping of the Huai River Basin (China) based on multi-source remote sensing data fusion

Author(s):  
Yihang Wang ◽  
Lin Fan ◽  
Ranting Tao ◽  
Letao Zhang ◽  
Wei Zhao
2014 ◽  
Vol 716-717 ◽  
pp. 1064-1067
Author(s):  
Jing Wen Xu ◽  
Yu Peng Wang ◽  
Jun Fang Zhao ◽  
Fei Yu Pu ◽  
Peng Wang

In this paper, the correlation between fused data and original data, the measured soil and the precipitation data over Huaihe river basin by exploring the inversion of soil moisture from the time and space based on the method of multi-source remote sensing data fusion has been studied. In order to fuse the AMSR-E data which is all-day and all-weather and can penetrate the earth surface to some extent, with the MODIS data that can reflect the surface condition and temperature characteristics, the method of wavelet fusion was carried out in MATLAB. The conclusions of this study are listed as follows: (1) the inversion result of the fused data based on AMSE-E and MODIS is much better than a single remote sensing data inversion; (2) the fused data based on AMSE-E and MODIS is sensitive to soil moisture change trend when the seasons alternated every year, especially in the spring, summer and autumn.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 168 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianbin Tao ◽  
Wenbin Wu ◽  
Meng Xu

Global food demand will increase over the next few decades, and sustainable agricultural intensification on current cropland may be a preferred option to meet this demand. Mapping cropping intensity with remote sensing data is of great importance for agricultural production, food security, and agricultural sustainability in the context of global climate change. However, there are some challenges in large-scale cropping intensity mapping. First, existing indicators are too coarse, and fine indicators for measuring cropping intensity are lacking. Second, the regional, intra-class variations detected in time-series remote sensing data across vast areas represent environment-related clusters for each cropping intensity level. However, few existing studies have taken into account the intra-class variations caused by varied crop patterns, crop phenology, and geographical differentiation. In this research, we first presented a new definition, a normalized cropping intensity index (CII), to quantify cropping intensity precisely. We then proposed a Bayesian network model fusing prior knowledge (BNPK) to address the issue of intra-class variations when mapping CII over large areas. This method can fuse regional differentiation factors as prior knowledge into the model to reduce the uncertainty. Experiments on five sample areas covering the main grain-producing areas of mainland China proved the effectiveness of the model. Our research proposes the framework of obtain a CII map with both a finer spatial resolution and a fine temporal resolution at a national scale.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peng Liu

In the past decades, remote sensing (RS) data fusion has always been an active research community. A large number of algorithms and models have been developed. Generative Adversarial Networks (GAN), as an important branch of deep learning, show promising performances in variety of RS image fusions. This review provides an introduction to GAN for remote sensing data fusion. We briefly review the frequently-used architecture and characteristics of GAN in data fusion and comprehensively discuss how to use GAN to realize fusion for homogeneous RS data, heterogeneous RS data, and RS and ground observation data. We also analyzed some typical applications with GAN-based RS image fusion. This review takes insight into how to make GAN adapt to different types of fusion tasks and summarizes the advantages and disadvantages of GAN-based RS data fusion. Finally, we discuss the promising future research directions and make a prediction on its trends.


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