4.7 Article

Object-Based Multi-Temporal and Multi-Source Land Cover Mapping Leveraging Hierarchical Class Relationships

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 12, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs12172814

Keywords

land cover classification; multi-source remote sensing; satellite image time series; object based image analysis; deep learning; neural networks pretraining

Funding

  1. French National Research Agency under the Investments for the Future Program [ANR-16-CONV-0004]
  2. Programme National de Teledetection Spatiale (PNTS) [PNTS-2018-5]
  3. LYSA project - French Space Agency (CNES) [DAR-TOSCA 4800001089]
  4. SERENA project - Cirad-INRA metaprogramme GloFoodS
  5. SIMCo project - Feed The Future Sustainable Innovation Lab (SIIL) through the USAID [201403286-10, AID-OOA-L-14-00006]

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European satellite missions Sentinel-1 (S1) and Sentinel-2 (S2) provide at high spatial resolution and high revisit time, respectively, radar and optical images that support a wide range of Earth surface monitoring tasks, such as Land Use/Land Cover mapping. A long-standing challenge in the remote sensing community is about how to efficiently exploit multiple sources of information and leverage their complementarity, in order to obtain the most out of radar and optical data. In this work, we propose to deal with land cover mapping in an object-based image analysis (OBIA) setting via a deep learning framework designed to leverage the multi-source complementarity provided by radar and optical satellite image time series (SITS). The proposed architecture is based on an extension of Recurrent Neural Network (RNN) enriched via a modified attention mechanism capable to fit the specificity of SITS data. Our framework also integrates a pretraining strategy that allows to exploit specific domain knowledge, shaped as hierarchy over the set of land cover classes, to guide the model training. Thorough experimental evaluations, involving several competitive approaches were conducted on two study sites, namely the Reunion island and a part of the Senegalese groundnut basin. Classification results, 79% of global accuracy on the Reunion island and 90% on the Senegalese site, respectively, have demonstrated the suitability of the proposal.

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