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Auteur Mohammed Bennamoun |
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Forest change detection in incomplete satellite images with deep neural networks / Salman H. Khan in IEEE Transactions on geoscience and remote sensing, vol 55 n° 9 (September 2017)
[article]
Titre : Forest change detection in incomplete satellite images with deep neural networks Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : Salman H. Khan, Auteur ; Xuming He, Auteur ; Fatih Porikli, Auteur ; Mohammed Bennamoun, Auteur Année de publication : 2017 Article en page(s) : pp 5407 - 5423 Note générale : Bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Applications de télédétection
[Termes IGN] analyse diachronique
[Termes IGN] analyse multirésolution
[Termes IGN] apprentissage profond
[Termes IGN] détection de changement
[Termes IGN] forêt
[Termes IGN] réflectance de surface
[Termes IGN] réseau neuronal artificiel
[Termes IGN] retouche
[Termes IGN] surveillance de la végétationRésumé : (Auteur) Land cover change monitoring is an important task from the perspective of regional resource monitoring, disaster management, land development, and environmental planning. In this paper, we analyze imagery data from remote sensing satellites to detect forest cover changes over a period of 29 years (1987-2015). Since the original data are severely incomplete and contaminated with artifacts, we first devise a spatiotemporal inpainting mechanism to recover the missing surface reflectance information. The spatial filling process makes use of the available data of the nearby temporal instances followed by a sparse encoding-based reconstruction. We formulate the change detection task as a region classification problem. We build a multiresolution profile (MRP) of the target area and generate a candidate set of bounding-box proposals that enclose potential change regions. In contrast to existing methods that use handcrafted features, we automatically learn region representations using a deep neural network in a data-driven fashion. Based on these highly discriminative representations, we determine forest changes and predict their onset and offset timings by labeling the candidate set of proposals. Our approach achieves the state-of-the-art average patch classification rate of 91.6% (an improvement of ~16%) and the mean onset/offset prediction error of 4.9 months (an error reduction of five months) compared with a strong baseline. We also qualitatively analyze the detected changes in the unlabeled image regions, which demonstrate that the proposed forest change detection approach is scalable to new regions. Numéro de notice : A2017-663 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : FORET/IMAGERIE Nature : Article nature-HAL : ArtAvecCL-RevueIntern DOI : 10.1109/TGRS.2017.2707528 En ligne : http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TGRS.2017.2707528 Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=87105
in IEEE Transactions on geoscience and remote sensing > vol 55 n° 9 (September 2017) . - pp 5407 - 5423[article]