4.5 Article

Remotely Sensed Soil Data Analysis Using Artificial Neural Networks: A Case Study of El-Fayoum Depression, Egypt

Journal

ISPRS INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GEO-INFORMATION
Volume 4, Issue 2, Pages 677-696

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijgi4020677

Keywords

remote sensing; soil classification; desertification; land use/cover; soil taxonomy; eigenvalues analysis; principal components analysis; artificial neural networks

Funding

  1. Egyptian National Authority for Remote Sensing and Space Sciences (NARSS)
  2. Egyptian Academy of Scientific Research and Technology
  3. SUDSOE [295031]
  4. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic [0021622411, 0021627501]
  5. Czech Science Foundation [104/08/0229, 202/07/1669]
  6. Grant Agency of Czech Republic [13-05082-S]
  7. CEPLANT
  8. project RAMP
  9. D center for low-cost plasma and nanotechnology surface modifications - European Regional Development Fund [CZ.1.05/2.1.00/03.0086]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Earth observation and monitoring of soil quality, long term changes of soil characteristics and deterioration processes such as degradation or desertification are among the most important objectives of remote sensing. The georeferenciation of such information contributes to the development and progress of the Digital Earth project in the framework of the information globalization process. Earth observation and soil quality monitoring via remote sensing are mostly based on the use of satellite spectral data. Advanced techniques are available to predict the soil or land use/cover categories from satellite imagery data. Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) are among the most widely used tools for modeling and prediction purposes in various fields of science. The assessment of satellite image quality and suitability for analysing the soil conditions (e.g., soil classification, land use/cover estimation, etc.) is fundamental. In this paper, methodology for data screening and subsequent application of ANNs in remote sensing is presented. The first stage is achieved via: (i) elimination of outliers, (ii) data pre-processing and (iii) the determination of the number of distinguishable soil classes via Eigenvalues Analysis (EA) and Principal Components Analysis (PCA). The next stage of ANNs use consists of: (i) building the training database, (ii) optimization of ANN architecture and database cleaning, and (iii) training and verification of the network. Application of the proposed methodology is shown.

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