4.7 Article

A cluster-based method to map urban area from DMSP/OLS nightlights

Journal

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT
Volume 147, Issue -, Pages 173-185

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2014.03.004

Keywords

DMSP/OLS; Nightlights; Urban area; Threshold; Cities; Segmentation; Land cover and land use change

Funding

  1. NASA ROSES Land-Cover/Land-Use Change Program [NNH11ZDA001N-LCLUC]
  2. Global Technology Strategy Project

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Accurate information on urban areas at regional and global scales is important for both the science and policy-making communities. The Defense Meteorological Satellite Program/Operational Linescan System (DMSP/OLS) nighttime stable light data (NTL) provide a potential way to map the extent and dynamics of urban areas in an economic and timely manner. In this study, we developed a cluster-based method to estimate optimal thresholds and map urban extent from the DMSP/OLS Nil data in five major steps, including data preprocessing, urban cluster segmentation, logistic model development, threshold estimation, and urban extent delineation. In our method the optimal thresholds vary by clusters and are estimated based on cluster size and overall nightlight magnitude. The United States and China, two large countries with different urbanization patterns, were selected to test the proposed method. Our results indicate that the urbanized area occupies about 2% of total land area in the US, ranging from lower than 0.5% to higher than 10% at the state level, and less than 1% in China, ranging from lower than 0.1% to about 5% at the province level with some municipalities as high as 10%. The derived thresholds and urban extent were evaluated using a validation sub-sample of high-resolution land cover data at the cluster and regional levels. It was found that our method can map urban areas in both countries efficiently and accurately. The sensitivity analysis indicates that the derived optimal thresholds are not highly sensitive to the parameter choices in the logistic model. Our method reduces the over- and under-estimation issues often associated with previous fixed-threshold techniques when mapping urban extent over a large area. More importantly, our method shows potential to map global urban extent and temporal dynamics using the DMSP/OLS NTL data in a timely, cost-effective way. (C) 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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