4.7 Article

Crop mapping from image time series: Deep learning with multi-scale label hierarchies

Journal

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT
Volume 264, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2021.112603

Keywords

Deep learning; Recurrent neural network (RNN); Convolutional RNN; Hierarchical classification; Multi-stage; Crop classification; Multi-temporal; Time series

Funding

  1. Swiss Federal Office for Agriculture (FOAG)

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This paper introduces a method for agricultural crop classification based on expert knowledge, using a hierarchical neural network model. Validated on a new large dataset, the hierarchical model shows at least 9.9 percentage points superiority in F1-score compared to baseline methods.
The aim of this paper is to map agricultural crops by classifying satellite image time series. Domain experts in agriculture work with crop type labels that are organised in a hierarchical tree structure, where coarse classes (like orchards) are subdivided into finer ones (like apples, pears, vines, etc.). We develop a crop classification method that exploits this expert knowledge and significantly improves the mapping of rare crop types. The threelevel label hierarchy is encoded in a convolutional, recurrent neural network (convRNN), such that for each pixel the model predicts three labels at different level of granularity. This end-to-end trainable, hierarchical network architecture allows the model to learn joint feature representations of rare classes (e.g., apples, pears) at a coarser level (e.g., orchard), thereby boosting classification performance at the fine-grained level. Additionally, labelling at different granularity also makes it possible to adjust the output according to the classification scores; as coarser labels with high confidence are sometimes more useful for agricultural practice than fine-grained but very uncertain labels. We validate the proposed method on a new, large dataset that we make public. ZueriCrop covers an area of 50 km x 48 km in the Swiss cantons of Zurich and Thurgau with a total of 116 ' 000 individual fields spanning 48 crop classes, and 28,000 (multi-temporal) image patches from Sentinel-2. We compare our proposed hierarchical convRNN model with several baselines, including methods designed for imbalanced class distributions. The hierarchical approach performs superior by at least 9.9 percentage points in F1-score.

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