A two-stage framework for road extraction from high-resolution satellite images by using prominent features of impervious surfaces

2014 ◽  
Vol 35 (24) ◽  
pp. 8074-8107 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pankaj Pratap Singh ◽  
R.D. Garg
2018 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weijia Li ◽  
Runmin Dong ◽  
Haohuan Fu ◽  
and Le Yu

Being an important economic crop that contributes 35% of the total consumption of vegetable oil, remote sensing-based quantitative detection of oil palm trees has long been a key research direction for both agriculture and environmental purposes. While existing methods already demonstrate satisfactory effectiveness for small regions, performing the detection for a large region with satisfactory accuracy is still challenging. In this study, we proposed a two-stage convolutional neural network (TS-CNN)-based oil palm detection method using high-resolution satellite images (i.e. Quickbird) in a large-scale study area of Malaysia. The TS-CNN consists of one CNN for land cover classification and one CNN for object classification. The two CNNs were trained and optimized independently based on 20,000 samples collected through human interpretation. For the large-scale oil palm detection for an area of 55 km2, we proposed an effective workflow that consists of an overlapping partitioning method for large-scale image division, a multi-scale sliding window method for oil palm coordinate prediction, and a minimum distance filter method for post-processing. Our proposed approach achieves a much higher average F1-score of 94.99% in our study area compared with existing oil palm detection methods (87.95%, 81.80%, 80.61%, and 78.35% for single-stage CNN, Support Vector Machine (SVM), Random Forest (RF), and Artificial Neural Network (ANN), respectively), and much fewer confusions with other vegetation and buildings in the whole image detection results.


Author(s):  
H. Kamangir ◽  
M. Momeni ◽  
M. Satari

This paper presents an automatic method to extract road centerline networks from high and very high resolution satellite images. The present paper addresses the automated extraction roads covered with multiple natural and artificial objects such as trees, vehicles and either shadows of buildings or trees. In order to have a precise road extraction, this method implements three stages including: classification of images based on maximum likelihood algorithm to categorize images into interested classes, modification process on classified images by connected component and morphological operators to extract pixels of desired objects by removing undesirable pixels of each class, and finally line extraction based on RANSAC algorithm. In order to evaluate performance of the proposed method, the generated results are compared with ground truth road map as a reference. The evaluation performance of the proposed method using representative test images show completeness values ranging between 77% and 93%.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document