The identification and monitoring of buildings from remotely sensed imagery are of considerable value for urbanization monitoring. Two outstanding issues in the detection of changes in buildings with composite structures and relief displacements are heterogeneous appearances and positional inconsistencies. In this paper, a novel patch-based matching approach is developed using densely connected conditional random field (CRF) optimization to detect building changes from bi-temporal aerial images. First, the bi-temporal aerial images are combined to obtain change information using an object-oriented technique, and then semantic segmentation based on a deep convolutional neural network is used to extract building areas. With the change information and extracted buildings, a graph-cuts-based segmentation algorithm is applied to generate the bi-temporal changed building proposals. Next, in the bi-temporal changed building proposals, corner and edge information are integrated for feature detection through a phase congruency (PC) model, and the structural feature descriptor, called the histogram of orientated PC, is used to perform patch-based roof matching. We determined the final change in buildings by gathering matched roof and bi-temporal changed building proposals using co-refinement based on CRF, which were further classified as "newly built," "demolished", or "changed". Experiments were conducted with two typical datasets covering complex urban scenes with diverse building types. The results confirm the effectiveness and generality of the proposed algorithm, with more than 85% and 90% in overall accuracy and completeness, respectively.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s19071557 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
August 2024
School of Geosciences, Faculty of Science, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia.
Seagrasses provide critical ecosystem services but cumulative human pressure on coastal environments has seen a global decline in their health and extent. Key processes of anthropogenic disturbance can operate at local spatio-temporal scales that are not captured by conventional satellite imaging. Seagrass management strategies to prevent longer-term loss and ensure successful restoration require effective methods for monitoring these fine-scale changes.
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June 2021
Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Kamycka 129, 165 00, Prague, Suchdol, Czech Republic.
The term Sudetenland refers to large regions of the former Czechoslovakia that had been dominated by Germans. German population was expelled directly after the Second World War, between 1945 and 1947. Almost three million people left large areas in less than two years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPollination services and honeybee health in general are important in the African savannahs particularly to farmers who often rely on honeybee products as a supplementary source of income. Therefore, it is imperative to understand the floral cycle, abundance and spatial distribution of melliferous plants in the African savannah landscapes. Furthermore, placement of apiaries in the landscapes could benefit from information on spatiotemporal patterns of flowering plants, by optimising honeybees' foraging behaviours, which could improve apiary productivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
March 2019
School of Remote Sensing and Information Engineering, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430079, China.
The identification and monitoring of buildings from remotely sensed imagery are of considerable value for urbanization monitoring. Two outstanding issues in the detection of changes in buildings with composite structures and relief displacements are heterogeneous appearances and positional inconsistencies. In this paper, a novel patch-based matching approach is developed using densely connected conditional random field (CRF) optimization to detect building changes from bi-temporal aerial images.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
March 2018
School of Remote Sensing and Information Engineering, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430079, China.
In this work, a novel building change detection method from bi-temporal dense-matching point clouds and aerial images is proposed to address two major problems, namely, the robust acquisition of the changed objects above ground and the automatic classification of changed objects into buildings or non-buildings. For the acquisition of changed objects above ground, the change detection problem is converted into a binary classification, in which the changed area above ground is regarded as the foreground and the other area as the background. For the gridded points of each period, the graph cuts algorithm is adopted to classify the points into foreground and background, followed by the region-growing algorithm to form candidate changed building objects.
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