4.7 Article

Mapping trees along urban street networks with deep learning and street-level imagery

Journal

ISPRS JOURNAL OF PHOTOGRAMMETRY AND REMOTE SENSING
Volume 175, Issue -, Pages 144-157

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.isprsjprs.2021.01.016

Keywords

Deep learning; Instance segmentation; Monocular depth estimation; Street-level images; Urban forest management

Funding

  1. University of British Columbia
  2. Genome Canada
  3. Genome British Columbia
  4. Genome Quebec under the research project Biosurveillance of Alien Forest Enemies (bioSAFE) as part of the 2015 Large-Scale Applied Research Project competition in Natural Resources and the Environment: Sector Challenges - Genomic Solutions [10106]
  5. Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship program [201709BPF-393653-294704]
  6. Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) of Canada

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Planning and managing urban forests for livable cities is a global challenge due to limited information on the spatial distribution, structure and composition of urban trees and forests. Researchers have developed a method using deep learning technology to rapidly and accurately identify and locate urban trees.
Planning and managing urban forests for livable cities remains a challenge worldwide owing to sparse information on the spatial distribution, structure and composition of urban trees and forests. National and municipal sources of tree inventory remain limited due to a lack of detailed, consistent and frequent inventory assessments. Despite advancements in research on the automation of urban tree mapping using Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) or high-resolution satellite imagery, in practice most municipalities still perform labor-intensive field surveys to collect and update tree inventories. We present a robust, affordable and rapid method for creating tree inventories in any urban region where sufficient street-level imagery is readily available. Our approach is novel in that we use a Mask Regional Convolutional Neural Network (Mask R-CNN) to detect and locate separate tree instances from street-level imagery, thereby successfully creating shape masks around unique fuzzy urban objects like trees. The novelty of this method is enhanced by using monocular depth estimation and triangulation to estimate precise tree location, relying only on photographs and images taken from the street. Experiments across four cities show that our method is transferable to different image sources (Google Street View, Mapillary) and urban ecosystems. We successfully detect >70% of all public and private trees recorded in a ground-truth campaign across Metro Vancouver. The accuracy of geolocation is also promising. We automatically locate public and private trees with a mean error in the absolute position ranging from 4 to 6 m, which is comparable to ground-truth measurements in conventional manual urban tree inventory campaigns.

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