4.7 Article

Multimodal Wildland Fire Smoke Detection

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 15, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs15112790

Keywords

multimodal remote sensing; wildfire mitigation; smoke detection; deep learning; image analysis

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Research has shown that climate change leads to warmer temperatures and drier conditions, resulting in longer wildfire seasons and increased risks of wildfires in the United States. Given the dangers posed by wildfires, there is an urgent need for effective tools and methods for wildfire management, including early detection techniques. This paper presents the integration of multiple data sources into SmokeyNet, a deep learning model that uses spatiotemporal information to detect smoke from wildland fires.
Research has shown that climate change creates warmer temperatures and drier conditions, leading to longer wildfire seasons and increased wildfire risks in the United States. These factors have, in turn, led to increases in the frequency, extent, and severity of wildfires in recent years. Given the danger posed by wildland fires to people, property, wildlife, and the environment, there is an urgent need to provide tools for effective wildfire management. Early detection of wildfires is essential to minimizing potentially catastrophic destruction. To that end, in this paper, we present our work on integrating multiple data sources into SmokeyNet, a deep learning model using spatiotemporal information to detect smoke from wildland fires. We present Multimodal SmokeyNet and SmokeyNet Ensemble for multimodal wildland fire smoke detection using satellite-based fire detections, weather sensor measurements, and optical camera images. An analysis is provided to compare these multimodal approaches to the baseline SmokeyNet in terms of accuracy metrics, as well as time-to-detect, which is important for the early detection of wildfires. Our results show that incorporating weather data in SmokeyNet improves performance numerically in terms of both F1 and time-to-detect over the baseline with a single data source. With a time-to-detect of only a few minutes, SmokeyNet can be used for automated early notification of wildfires, providing a useful tool in the fight against destructive wildfires.

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