4.7 Article

Operational Automatic Remote Sensing Image Understanding Systems: Beyond Geographic Object-Based and Object-Oriented Image Analysis (GEOBIA/GEOOIA). Part 1: Introduction

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 4, Issue 9, Pages 2694-2735

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs4092694

Keywords

categorical variable; computer vision; continuous variable; decision-tree classifier; deductive learning from rules; Geographic Object-Based Image Analysis (GEOBIA); Geographic Object-Oriented Image Analysis (GEOOIA); human vision; image classification; inductive learning from either labeled (supervised) or unlabeled; (unsupervised) data; inference; machine learning; physical model; pre-attentive and attentive vision; prior knowledge; radiometric calibration; remote sensing; Satellite Image Automatic Mapper (TM) (SIAM (TM)); syntactic inference system; statistical model; Strengths Weakness Opportunities and Threats (SWOT) analysis of a project

Funding

  1. National Aeronautics and Space Administration through the Earth Science Division of the Science Mission Directorate [NNX07AV19G]
  2. European Union [263435]

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According to existing literature and despite their commercial success, state-of-the-art two-stage non-iterative geographic object-based image analysis (GEOBIA) systems and three-stage iterative geographic object-oriented image analysis (GEOOIA) systems, where GEOOIA superset of GEOBIA, remain affected by a lack of productivity, general consensus and research. To outperform the degree of automation, accuracy, efficiency, robustness, scalability and timeliness of existing GEOBIA/GEOOIA systems in compliance with the Quality Assurance Framework for Earth Observation (QA4EO) guidelines, this methodological work is split into two parts. The present first paper provides a multi-disciplinary Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats (SWOT) analysis of the GEOBIA/GEOOIA approaches that augments similar analyses proposed in recent years. In line with constraints stemming from human vision, this SWOT analysis promotes a shift of learning paradigm in the pre-attentive vision first stage of a remote sensing (RS) image understanding system (RS-IUS), from sub-symbolic statistical model-based (inductive) image segmentation to symbolic physical model-based (deductive) image preliminary classification. Hence, a symbolic deductive pre-attentive vision first stage accomplishes image sub-symbolic segmentation and image symbolic pre-classification simultaneously. In the second part of this work a novel hybrid (combined deductive and inductive) RS-IUS architecture featuring a symbolic deductive pre-attentive vision first stage is proposed and discussed in terms of: (a) computational theory (system design); (b) information/knowledge representation; (c) algorithm design; and (d) implementation. As proof-of-concept of symbolic physical model-based pre-attentive vision first stage, the spectral knowledge-based, operational, near real-time Satellite Image Automatic Mapper (TM) (SIAM (TM)) is selected from existing literature. To the best of these authors' knowledge, this is the first time a symbolic syntactic inference system, like SIAM (TM), is made available to the RS community for operational use in a RS-IUS pre-attentive vision first stage, to accomplish multi-scale image segmentation and multi-granularity image pre-classification simultaneously, automatically and in near real-time.

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