scholarly journals Crowdsourcing In-Situ Data on Land Cover and Land Use Using Gamification and Mobile Technology

2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
pp. 905 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Laso Bayas ◽  
Linda See ◽  
Steffen Fritz ◽  
Tobias Sturn ◽  
Christoph Perger ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Juan Carlos Laso Bayas ◽  
Linda See ◽  
Hedwig Bartl ◽  
Tobias Sturn ◽  
Mathias Karner ◽  
...  

There are many new land use and land cover (LULC) products emerging yet there is still a lack of in-situ data for training, validation, and change detection purposes. The LUCAS (Land Use Cover Area frame Sample) survey is one of the few authoritative in-situ field campaigns, which takes place every three years in European Union member countries. More recently, a study has considered whether citizen science and crowdsourcing could complement LUCAS survey data, e.g., through the FotoQuest Austria mobile app and crowdsourcing campaign. Although the data obtained from the campaign were promising when compared with authoritative LUCAS survey data, there were classes that were not well classified by the citizens, and the photographs submitted through the app were not always of sufficient quality. For this reason, in the latest FotoQuest Go Europe 2018 campaign, several improvements were made to the app to facilitate interaction with the citizens contributing and to improve their accuracy in LULC identification. In addition to extending the locations from Austria to Europe, a change detection component (comparing land cover in 2018 to the 2015 LUCAS photographs) was added, as well as an improved LC decision tree and a near real-time quality assurance system to provide feedback on the distance to the target location, the LULC classes chosen and the quality of the photographs. Another modification was the implementation of a monetary incentive scheme in which users received between 1 to 3 Euros for each successfully completed quest of sufficient quality. The purpose of this paper is to present these new features and to compare the results obtained by the citizens with authoritative LUCAS data from 2018 in terms of LULC and change in LC. We also compared the results between the FotoQuest campaigns in 2015 and 2018 and found a significant improvement in 2018, i.e., a much higher match of LC between FotoQuest Go Europe and LUCAS. Finally, we present the results from a user survey to discuss challenges encountered during the campaign and what further improvements could be made in the future, including better in-app navigation and offline maps, making FotoQuest a model for enabling the collection of large amounts of land cover data at a low cost.


Land ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 446
Author(s):  
Juan Carlos Laso Bayas ◽  
Linda See ◽  
Hedwig Bartl ◽  
Tobias Sturn ◽  
Mathias Karner ◽  
...  

There are many new land use and land cover (LULC) products emerging yet there is still a lack of in situ data for training, validation, and change detection purposes. The LUCAS (Land Use Cover Area frame Sample) survey is one of the few authoritative in situ field campaigns, which takes place every three years in European Union member countries. More recently, a study has considered whether citizen science and crowdsourcing could complement LUCAS survey data, e.g., through the FotoQuest Austria mobile app and crowdsourcing campaign. Although the data obtained from the campaign were promising when compared with authoritative LUCAS survey data, there were classes that were not well classified by the citizens. Moreover, the photographs submitted through the app were not always of sufficient quality. For these reasons, in the latest FotoQuest Go Europe 2018 campaign, several improvements were made to the app to facilitate interaction with the citizens contributing and to improve their accuracy in LULC identification. In addition to extending the locations from Austria to Europe, a change detection component (comparing land cover in 2018 to the 2015 LUCAS photographs) was added, as well as an improved LC decision tree. Furthermore, a near real-time quality assurance system was implemented to provide feedback on the distance to the target location, the LULC classes chosen and the quality of the photographs. Another modification was a monetary incentive scheme in which users received between 1 to 3 Euros for each successfully completed quest of sufficient quality. The purpose of this paper is to determine whether citizens can provide high quality in situ data on LULC through crowdsourcing that can complement LUCAS. We compared the results between the FotoQuest campaigns in 2015 and 2018 and found a significant improvement in 2018, i.e., a much higher match of LC between FotoQuest Go Europe and LUCAS. As shown by the cost comparisons with LUCAS, FotoQuest can complement LUCAS surveys by enabling continuous collection of large amounts of high quality, spatially explicit field data at a low cost.


2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 244-253 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Mack ◽  
Patrick Leinenkugel ◽  
Claudia Kuenzer ◽  
Stefan Dech
Keyword(s):  
Land Use ◽  

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 1119-1133
Author(s):  
Raphaël d'Andrimont ◽  
Astrid Verhegghen ◽  
Michele Meroni ◽  
Guido Lemoine ◽  
Peter Strobl ◽  
...  

Abstract. The Land Use/Cover Area frame Survey (LUCAS) is an evenly spaced in situ land cover and land use ground survey exercise that extends over the whole of the European Union. LUCAS was carried out in 2006, 2009, 2012, 2015, and 2018. A new LUCAS module specifically tailored to Earth observation (EO) was introduced in 2018: the LUCAS Copernicus module. The module surveys the land cover extent up to 51 m in four cardinal directions around a point of observation, offering in situ data compatible with the spatial resolution of high-resolution sensors. However, the use of the Copernicus module being marginal, the goal of the paper is to facilitate its uptake by the EO community. First, the paper summarizes the LUCAS Copernicus protocol to collect homogeneous land cover on a surface area of up to 0.52 ha. Secondly, it proposes a methodology to create a ready-to-use dataset for Earth observation land cover and land use applications with high-resolution satellite imagery. As a result, a total of 63 364 LUCAS points distributed over 26 level-2 land cover classes were surveyed on the ground. Using homogeneous extent information in the four cardinal directions, a polygon was delineated for each of these points. Through geospatial analysis and by semantically linking the LUCAS core and Copernicus module land cover observations, 58 426 polygons are provided with level-3 land cover (66 specific classes including crop type) and land use (38 classes) information as inherited from the LUCAS core observation. The open-access dataset supplied with this paper (https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.12382667.v4 d'Andrimont, 2020) provides a unique opportunity to train and validate decametric sensor-based products such as those obtained from the Copernicus Sentinel-1 and Sentinel-2 satellites. A follow-up of the LUCAS Copernicus module is already planned for 2022. In 2022, a simplified version of the LUCAS Copernicus module will be carried out on 150 000 LUCAS points for which in situ surveying is planned. This guarantees a continuity in the effort to find synergies between statistical in situ surveying and the need to collect in situ data relevant for Earth observation in the European Union.


Author(s):  
D. Espinoza Molina ◽  
K. Alonso ◽  
M. Datcu

This paper presents the semantic indexing of TerraSAR-X images and in situ data. Image processing together with machine learning methods, relevance feedback techniques, and human expertise are used to annotate the image content into a land use land cover catalogue. All the generated information is stored into a geo-database supporting the link between different types of information and the computation of queries and analytics. We used 11 TerraSAR-X scenes over Germany and LUCAS as in situ data. The semantic index is composed of about 73 land use land cover categories found in TerraSAR-X test dataset and 84 categories found in LUCAS dataset.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raphaël d'Andrimont ◽  
Astrid Verhegghen ◽  
Michele Meroni ◽  
Guido Lemoine ◽  
Peter Strobl ◽  
...  

Abstract. The Land Use/Cover Area frame Survey (LUCAS) is a regular in-situ land cover and land use ground survey exercise that extends over the whole of the European Union. LUCAS was carried out in 2006, 2009, 2012, 2015, and 2018. A new LUCAS module specifically tailored to Earth Observation was introduced in 2018: the LUCAS Copernicus module, aiming at surveying land cover extent up to 51 meters in four cardinal directions around a point of observation. This paper first summarizes the LUCAS Copernicus protocol to collect homogeneous land cover on a surface area of up to a 0.52 ha. Secondly, it proposes a methodology to create a ready-to-use dataset for Earth Observation land cover and land use applications with high resolution satellite imagery. As a result, a total of 63,364 LUCAS points distributed over 26 level-2 land cover classes were surveyed on the ground. Using homogeneous extent information in the four cardinal direction, a polygon was delineated for each of such point. Through geo-spatial analysis and by semantically linking the LUCAS core and Copernicus land cover observations, 58,428 polygons are provided with a level-3 land cover (66 specific classes including crop type) and land use (38 classes) information as inherited from the LUCAS core observation. The open-access dataset supplied with this manuscript (https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.12382667.v3) provides a unique opportunity to train and validate decametric sensor-based products such as those obtained from the Copernicus Sentinel-1 and -2 satellites. A follow-up of the LUCAS Copernicus module is already planned for 2022. In 2022, a simplified version of the LUCAS Copernicus module will be carried out on 150,000 LUCAS points for which in-situ surveying is planned. This guarantees a continuity in the effort to find synergies between statistical in-situ surveying and the need to collect in-situ data relevant for Earth Observation in the European Union.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jasdeep S Anand ◽  
Paul S Monks

Abstract. Land Use Regression (LUR) models have been used in epidemiology to determine the fine-scale spatial variation in air pollutants such as nitrogen dioxide (NO2) in cities and larger regions. However, they are often limited in their temporal resolution, which may potentially be rectified by employing the synoptic coverage provided by satellite measurements. In this work a mixed effects LUR model is developed to model daily surface NO2 concentrations over the Hong Kong SAR during 2005-2015. In-situ measurements from the Hong Kong Air Quality Monitoring Network, along with tropospheric vertical column density (VCD) data from the OMI, GOME-2A and SCIAMACHY satellite instruments were combined with fine-scale land use parameters to provide the spatiotemporal information necessary to predict daily surface concentrations. Cross-validation with the in-situ data shows that the mixed effect LUR model using OMI data has a high predictive power (adj. R2 = 0.84), especially when compared with surface concentrations derived using the MACC-II reanalysis model dataset (adj. R2 = 0.11). Time series analysis shows no statistically significant trend in NO2 concentrations during 2005-2015, despite a reported decline in NOx emissions. This study demonstrates the utility in combining satellite data with LUR models to derive daily maps of ambient surface NO2 for use in exposure studies.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Verhegghen Astrid ◽  
d'Andrimont Raphaël ◽  
Lemoine Guido ◽  
Strobl Peter ◽  
van der Velde Marijn

<p>Efficient near-real time and wall-to-wall land monitoring is now possible with unprecedented detail because of the fleet of Copernicus Sentinel satellites. This remote sensing paradigm is the consequence of the freely accessible, global, Copernicus data, combined with affordable cloud computing. However, to translate this capacity in accurate products, and to truly benefit from the high spatial detail (~10m) and temporal resolution (~5 days in constellation) of the Sentinels 1 and 2, high quality and timely in-situ data remains crucial. Robust operational monitoring systems are in need of both training and validation data. </p><p>Here, we demonstrate the potential of Sentinel 1 observations and complementary high-quality in-situ data to generate a crop type map at continental scale. In 2018, the Land Cover and Land Use Area frame Survey (LUCAS) carried out in the European Union contained a specific Copernicus module corresponding to 93.091 polygons surveyed in-situ. In contrast to the usual LUCAS point observation, the Copernicus protocol provides data on the extent of homogeneous land cover for a maximum size of 100 x 100 m, making it meaningful for remote sensing applications. After filtering the polygons to retrieve only high quality sample, a sample was selected to explore the accuracy of crop type maps at different moments of the 2018 growing season over Europe. The time series of 10 days VV and VH were classified using Random Forest models. The crops that were mapped correspond to the 13 major crops in Europe and are those that are monitored and forecast by the JRC MARS activities (soft wheat, maize, rapeseed, barley, potatoes, ...). Overall, reasonable accuracies were obtained (~80%). Although no a priori parcel delineation was used, it was encouraging to observe the relative homogeneity of pixel classification results within the same parcel. In the context of forecasting, we specifically assessed at what time in the growing season accuracies moved beyond a set threshold for the different crops. This ranged from May for winter crops such as soft wheat, and September for summer crops such as maize. </p><p>Our results contribute to the discussion regarding the usefulness, benefits, as well as weaknesses, of the newly acquired LUCAS Copernicus data. Doing so, this study demonstrates the potential of in-situ surveys such as LUCAS Copernicus module  specifically targeted for Earth Observation applications. Future improvements to the LUCAS Copernicus survey methodology are suggested. Importantly, now that LUCAS has been postponed to 2022, and aligned with the Copernicus space program, we advocate for a European Union wide systematic and representative in-situ sample campaign relevant for Earth Observation applications, beyond the traditional LUCAS survey. </p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Audrey Jolivot ◽  
Valentine Lebourgeois ◽  
Mael Ameline ◽  
Valérie Andriamanga ◽  
Beatriz Bellón ◽  
...  

Abstract. The availability of crop type reference datasets for satellite image classification is very limited for complex agricultural systems as observed in developing and emerging countries. Indeed, agricultural land use is very dynamic, agricultural census are often poorly georeferenced, and crop types are difficult to photo-interpret directly from satellite imagery. In this paper, we present nine datasets collected in a standardized manner between 2013 and 2020 in seven tropical and subtropical countries within the framework of the international JECAM (Joint Experiment for Crop Assessment and Monitoring) initiative. These quality-controlled datasets are distinguished by in situ data collected at field scale by local experts, with precise geographic coordinates, and following a common protocol. Altogether, the datasets completed 27 074 polygons (20 257 crop and 6 817 non-crop) documented by detailed keywords. These datasets can be used to produce and validate agricultural land use maps in the tropics, but also, to assess the performances and the robustness of classification methods of cropland and crop types/practices in a large range of tropical farming systems. The dataset is available at https://doi.org/10.18167/DVN1/P7OLAP.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer Sobiech-Wolf ◽  
Tobias Ullmann ◽  
Wolfgang Dierking

<p>Satellite remote sensing as well as in-situ measurements are common tools to monitor the state of Arctic environments. However, remote sensing products often lack sufficient temporal and/or spatial resolution, and in-situ measurements can only describe the environmental conditions on a very limited spatial scale. Therefore, we conducted an air-borne campaign to connect the detailed in-situ data with poor spatial coverage to coarse satellite images. The SMART campaign is part of the ongoing project „Characterization of Polar Permafrost Landscapes by Means of Multi-Temporal and Multi-Scale Remote Sensing, and In-Situ Measurements“, funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG).  The focus of the project is to close the gap between in-situ measurements and space-borne images in polar permafrost landscapes. The airborne campaign SMART was conducted in late summer 2018 in north-west Canada, focussing on the Mackenzie-Delta region, which is underlain by permafrost and rarely inhabited. The land cover is either dominated by open Tundra landscapes or by boreal forests. The Polar-5 research-aircraft from the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Center for Polar and Marine Research, Germany, was equipped with a ground penetrating radar, a hyperspectral camara, a laserscanner, and an infrared temperature sensor amongst others. In parallel to the airborne acquisition, a team collected in-situ data on ground, including manual active layer depth measurements, geophysical surveying using 2D Electric Resistivity Tomography (ERT), GPR, and mapping of additional land cover properties. The database was completed by a variety of satellite data from different platforms, e.g. MODIS, Landsat, TerraSAR-X and Sentinel-1.  As part of the project, we analysed the performance of MODIS Land surfaces temperature products compared to our air-borne infrared measurements and evaluated, how long the land surface temperatures of this Arctic environment can be considered as stable. It turned out that the MODIS data differ up to 2°C from the air-borne measurements. If this is due to the spatial difference of the measurements or a result of data processing of the MODIS LST products is part of ongoing analysis.</p>


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