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RSS FeedsRemote Sensing, Vol. 12, Pages 346: Mapping Landslides on EO Data: Performance of Deep Learning Models vs. Traditional Machine Learning Models (Remote Sensing)

 
 

21 january 2020 18:02:47

 
Remote Sensing, Vol. 12, Pages 346: Mapping Landslides on EO Data: Performance of Deep Learning Models vs. Traditional Machine Learning Models (Remote Sensing)
 


Mapping landslides using automated methods is a challenging task, which is still largely done using human efforts. Today, the availability of high-resolution EO data products is increasing exponentially, and one of the targets is to exploit this data source for the rapid generation of landslide inventory. Conventional methods like pixel-based and object-based machine learning strategies have been studied extensively in the last decade. In addition, recent advances in CNN (convolutional neural network), a type of deep-learning method, has been widely successful in extracting information from images and have outperformed other conventional learning methods. In the last few years, there have been only a few attempts to adapt CNN for landslide mapping. In this study, we introduce a modified U-Net model for semantic segmentation of landslides at a regional scale from EO data using ResNet34 blocks for feature extraction. We also compare this with conventional pixel-based and object-based methods. The experiment was done in Douglas County, a study area selected in the south of Portland in Oregon, USA, and landslide inventory extracted from SLIDO (Statewide Landslide Information Database of Oregon) was considered as the ground truth. Landslide mapping is an imbalanced learning problem with very limited availability of training data. Our network was trained on a combination of focal Tversky loss and cross-entropy loss functions using augmented image tiles sampled from a selected training area. The deep-learning method was observed to have a better performance than the conventional methods with an MCC (Matthews correlation coefficient) score of 0 . 495 and a POD (probability of detection) rate of 0 . 72 .


 
201 viewsCategory: Geology, Physics
 
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