scholarly journals Information technology of land cover types classification of waste bank landscapesusing multispectral space survey data

2010 ◽  
Vol 4 (32) ◽  
Author(s):  
Е. К. Сергеева
Author(s):  
D. Amarsaikhan

Abstract. The aim of this research is to classify urban land cover types using an advanced classification method. As the input bands to the classification, the features derived from Landsat 8 and Sentinel 1A SAR data sets are used. To extract the reliable urban land cover information from the optical and SAR features, a rule-based classification algorithm that uses spatial thresholds defined from the contextual knowledge is constructed. The result of the constructed method is compared with the results of a standard classification technique and it indicates a higher accuracy. Overall, the study demonstrates that the multisource data sets can considerably improve the classification of urban land cover types and the rule-based method is a powerful tool to produce a reliable land cover map.


Author(s):  
L. Cohen ◽  
O. Almog ◽  
M. Shoshany

Abstract. A novel classification technique based on definition of unique spectral relations (such as slopes among spectral bands) for all land cover types named (SSF Significant Spectral Features) is presented in the article.A large slopes combination between spectral band pairs is calculated and spectral characterizations that emphasizes the best spectral land cover separation is sought. Increasing in dimensionality of spectral representations is balanced by the simplicity of calculations. The technique has been examined on data acquired by a flown hyperspectral scanner (AISA). The spectral data was narrowed into the equivalent 8 world-view2 channels. The research area was in the city of “Hadera”, Israel, which included 10 land cover types in an urban area, open area and road infrastructure. The comparison between the developed SSF technique and common techniques such as: SVM (Support Vector Machine) and ML (Maximum Likelihood) has shown a clear advantage over ML technique, while produced similar results as SVM. The poorest results of using SSF technique was achieved in an herbaceous area (70%). However, the simplicity of the method, the well-defined parameters it produces for interpreting the results, makes it intuitive over using techniques such as SVM, which is considered as a not explicit classifier.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. e0190476 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina Bogner ◽  
Bumsuk Seo ◽  
Dorian Rohner ◽  
Björn Reineking

Author(s):  
Bambang Trisakti ◽  
Atriyon Julzarika ◽  
Udhi C. Nugroho ◽  
Dipo Yudhatama ◽  
Yudi Lasmana

Indonesia has been known as a home of the tropical peatlands. The peatlands are mainly in Sumatera, Kalimantan and Papua Islands. Spatial information on peatland depth is needed for the planning of agricultural land extensification. The research objective was to develop a preliminary estimation model of peat thickness classes based on land cover approach and analyse its applicability using Landsat 8 image. Ground data, including land cover, location and thickness of peat, were obtained from various surveys and peatlands potential map (Geology Map and Wetlands Peat Map). The land cover types were derived from Landsat 8 image. All data were used to build an initial model for estimating peat thickness classes in Merauke Regency. A table of relationships among land cover types, peat potential areas and peat thickness classes were made using ground survey data and peatlands potential maps of that were best suited to ground survey data. Furthermore, the table was used to determine peat thickness classes using land cover information produced from Landsat 8 image. The results showed that the estimated peat thickness classes in Merauke Regency consist of two classes, i.e., very shallow peatlands and shallow peatlands. Shallow peatlands were distributed at the upper part of Merauke Regency with mainly covered by forest. In comparison with Indonesia Peatlands Map, the number of classes was the two classes. The spatial distribution of shallow peatlands was relatively similar for its precision and accuracy, but the estimated area of shallow peatlands was greater than the area of shallow peatlands from Indonesia Peatlands Map. This research answered the question that peat thickness classes could be estimated by the land cover approach qualitatively. The precise estimation of peat thickness could not be done due to the limitation of insitu data.  


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 660 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chang-An Liu ◽  
Zhongxin Chen ◽  
Di Wang ◽  
Dandan Li

We present a classification of plastic-mulched farmland (PMF) and other land cover types using full polarimetric RADARSAT-2 data and dual polarimetric (HH, VV) TerraSAR-X data, acquired from a test site in Hebei, China, where the main land covers include PMF, bare soil, winter wheat, urban areas and water. The main objectives were to evaluate the outcome of using high-resolution TerraSAR-X data for classifying PMF and other land covers and to compare classification accuracies based on different synthetic aperture radar bands and polarization parameters. Initially, different polarimetric indices were calculated, while polarimetric decomposition methods were used to obtain the polarimetric decomposition components. Using these polarimetric components as input, the random forest supervised classification algorithm was applied in the classification experiments. Our results show that in this study full-polarimetric RADARSAT-2 data produced the most accurate overall classification (94.81%), indicating that full polarization is vital to distinguishing PMF from other land cover types. Dual polarimetric data had similar levels of classification error for PMF and bare soil, yielding mapping accuracies of 53.28% and 59.48% (TerraSAR-X), and 59.56% and 57.1% (RADARSAT-2), respectively. We found that Shannon entropy made the greatest contribution to accuracy in all three experiments, suggesting that it has great potential to improve agricultural land use classifications based on remote sensing.


2014 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 073457 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cong Wang ◽  
Hong-Yu Liu ◽  
Ying Zhang ◽  
Yu-feng Li

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