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Planning of commercial thinnings using machine learning and airborne Lidar data / Tauri Arumäe in Forests, vol 13 n° 2 (February 2022)
[article]
Titre : Planning of commercial thinnings using machine learning and airborne Lidar data Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : Tauri Arumäe, Auteur ; Mait Lang, Auteur ; Allan Sims, Auteur ; et al., Auteur Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : n° 206 Note générale : bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Lasergrammétrie
[Termes IGN] apprentissage automatique
[Termes IGN] classification par forêts d'arbres décisionnels
[Termes IGN] données lidar
[Termes IGN] données localisées 3D
[Termes IGN] éclaircie (sylviculture)
[Termes IGN] Estonie
[Termes IGN] gestion forestière
[Termes IGN] inventaire forestier (techniques et méthodes)
[Termes IGN] modèle linéaire
[Termes IGN] planification
[Termes IGN] semis de pointsRésumé : (auteur) The goal of this study was to predict the need for commercial thinning using airborne lidar data (ALS) with random forest (RF) machine learning algorithm. Two test sites (with areas of 14,750 km2 and 12,630 km2) were used with a total of 1053 forest stands from southwestern Estonia and 951 forest stands from southeastern Estonia. The thinnings were predicted based on the ALS measurements in 2019 and 2017. The two most important ALS metrics for predicting the need for thinning were the 95th height percentile and the canopy cover. The prediction accuracy based on validation stands was 93.5% for southwestern Estonia and 85.7% for southeastern Estonia. For comparison, the general linear model prediction accuracy was less for both test sites—92.1% for southwest and 81.8% for southeast. The selected important predictive ALS metrics differed from those used in the RF algorithm. The cross-validation of the thinning necessity models of southeastern and southwestern Estonia showed a dependence on geographic regions. Numéro de notice : A2022-122 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : FORET/IMAGERIE Nature : Article DOI : 10.3390/f13020206 Date de publication en ligne : 29/01/2022 En ligne : https://doi.org/10.3390/f13020206 Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=99674
in Forests > vol 13 n° 2 (February 2022) . - n° 206[article]Seasonal variations of vertical crustal motion in Australia observed by joint analysis of GPS and GRACE / Hao Wang in Geomatics and Information Science of Wuhan University, vol 47 n° 2 (February 2022)
[article]
Titre : Seasonal variations of vertical crustal motion in Australia observed by joint analysis of GPS and GRACE Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : Hao Wang, Auteur ; Jianping Yue, Auteur ; Yunfei Xiang, Auteur Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : pp 197 - 207 Note générale : bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Géodésie physique
[Termes IGN] analyse de spectre singulier
[Termes IGN] Australie
[Termes IGN] déformation verticale de la croute terrestre
[Termes IGN] données GPS
[Termes IGN] données GRACE
[Termes IGN] transformation en ondelettes
[Termes IGN] variation saisonnièreRésumé : (auteur) Objectives There are obvious seasonal variations in the GPS height time series, which affect the improvement of precision and can be corrected by both mathematical modelling and geophysical mechanisms. Compared to least square fitting, singular spectrum analysis (SSA) can extract random seasonal signals effectively through signal reconstruction, which is unaffected by the assumed sinusoidal waves. According to the elastic loading theory, the gravity recovery and climate experiment (GRACE) can be used to calculate the vertical surface displacement caused by changes in terrestrial water storage. Methods This paper mainly studies the feasibility of correcting the seasonal variations in GPS heights using SSA and GRACE inversion results. The height time series of 27 GPS stations in Australia with a time span of from 5 to 10 years were chosen and combined with GRACE simultaneous inversions. Results Because the spatial resolutions of GRACE are coarse and the loading displacement is much more sensitive to near-field mass changes than far-field ones, the amplitudes of GRACE-inferred hydrological loading deformations are significantly smaller than GPS. The weighted root mean square (WRMS) are reduced at 22 stations after GRACE-inferred displacement corrections, and the correlation coefficients between deformations estimated by GPS and GRACE range from 0.12 to 0.78 with a mean value of 0.43, indicating that GPS and GRACE results have good consistency and correlation. SSA is used to extract the annual signals of vertical displacements derived from GPS and GRACE, and contribution rates of singular spectral variance of annual signals are 21.60% and 34.48%, respectively, expressing that annual signals are the main components of GRACE-inferred results. Geographical climatic conditions have a significant impact on the consistency of annual signals derived from GPS and GRACE. Compared with the arid areas in central and western Australia, the amplitude and phase of annual signals derived from GPS and GRACE are more consistent in the northern region with seasonal rainfall. Furthermore, cross wavelet transform (XWT) finds that the vertical displacement series derived from GPS and GRACE of each station have a significant resonance period of one year. The circular average phase angles of GPS/GRACE at the period closet to 1 cycle per year (cpy) outside the cone of influence range from -74.03° to 67.23°. The mean XWT-based semblances range from 0.28 to 0.99 with an average value of 0.79, showing that there is a significant positive correlation between the annual variations derived from GPS and GRACE. Conclusions Overall, GRACE-inferred deformations can explain the annual variations of GPS-derived displacements, particularly in areas with high hydrological loading. It is possible to correct the annual signals of GPS heights by GRACE inversions, but the effect is not as good as the SSA-filtered annual signals. Numéro de notice : A2022-150 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : POSITIONNEMENT Nature : Article DOI : 10.13203/j.whugis20190282 Date de publication en ligne : 05/02/2022 En ligne : http://dx.doi.org/10.13203/j.whugis20190282 Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=100109
in Geomatics and Information Science of Wuhan University > vol 47 n° 2 (February 2022) . - pp 197 - 207[article]Siamese Adversarial Network for image classification of heavy mineral grains / Huizhen Hao in Computers & geosciences, vol 159 (February 2022)
[article]
Titre : Siamese Adversarial Network for image classification of heavy mineral grains Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : Huizhen Hao, Auteur ; Zhiwei Jiang, Auteur ; Shiping Ge, Auteur ; et al., Auteur Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : n° 105016 Note générale : bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Traitement d'image
[Termes IGN] apprentissage profond
[Termes IGN] classification barycentrique
[Termes IGN] classification et arbre de régression
[Termes IGN] classification par forêts d'arbres décisionnels
[Termes IGN] extraction de traits caractéristiques
[Termes IGN] microscope électronique
[Termes IGN] minéral
[Termes IGN] polarisation croisée
[Termes IGN] réseau antagoniste génératif
[Termes IGN] réseau neuronal siamois
[Termes IGN] séparateur à vaste margeRésumé : (auteur) The identification of heavy mineral grains based on microscopic images can significantly reduce the time and economic cost of the identification. There are several deep learning models to realize end-to-end identification of mineral image recently. However, due to the variety and complexity of mineral images, the existing models are difficult to accurately recognize heavy mineral grains in microscopic images. Here we propose the Siamese Adversarial Network (SAN) for image classification of the heavy mineral grains, which is the first time to focus on addressing the domain difference of heavy mineral images from different basins. In more details, we design a Siamese feature encoder to extract features of both the plane-polarized and cross-polarized images as internal representation of heavy mineral grains. The features are reconstructed to discard domain-related information by adversarial training the heavy mineral classifier and domain discriminator. The identification performance of the models under the three mixed domain experiments is consistently higher than the performance under the same domain settings respectively which shows that the model we proposed achieves a great generalization ability on unseen domains. Numéro de notice : A2022-174 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : IMAGERIE Nature : Article DOI : 10.1016/j.cageo.2021.105016 Date de publication en ligne : 03/12/2021 En ligne : https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cageo.2021.105016 Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=99810
in Computers & geosciences > vol 159 (February 2022) . - n° 105016[article]SNN_flow: a shared nearest-neighbor-based clustering method for inhomogeneous origin-destination flows / Qiliang Liu in International journal of geographical information science IJGIS, vol 36 n° 2 (February 2022)
[article]
Titre : SNN_flow: a shared nearest-neighbor-based clustering method for inhomogeneous origin-destination flows Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : Qiliang Liu, Auteur ; Jie Yang, Auteur ; Min Deng, Auteur ; et al., Auteur Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : pp 253 - 279 Note générale : bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Vedettes matières IGN] Analyse spatiale
[Termes IGN] analyse de groupement
[Termes IGN] classification ascendante hiérarchique
[Termes IGN] classification barycentrique
[Termes IGN] flux
[Termes IGN] méthode de Monte-Carlo
[Termes IGN] mobilité urbaine
[Termes IGN] noeud
[Termes IGN] origine - destination
[Termes IGN] Pékin (Chine)
[Termes IGN] réseau routier
[Termes IGN] taxi
[Termes IGN] trajet (mobilité)Résumé : (auteur) Identifying clusters from individual origin–destination (OD) flows is vital for investigating spatial interactions and flow mapping. However, detecting arbitrarily-shaped and non-uniform flow clusters from network-constrained OD flows continues to be a challenge. This study proposes a shared nearest-neighbor-based clustering method (SNN_flow) for inhomogeneous OD flows constrained by a road network. To reveal clusters of varying shapes and densities, a normalized density for each OD flow is defined based on the concept of shared nearest-neighbor, and flow clusters are constructed using the density-connectivity mechanism. To handle large amounts of disaggregated OD flows, an efficient method for searching the network-constrained k-nearest flows is developed based on a local road node distance matrix. The parameters of SNN_flow are statistically determined: the density threshold is modeled as a significance level of a significance test, and the number of nearest neighbors is estimated based on the variance of the kth nearest distance. SNN_flow is compared with three state-of-the-art methods using taxicab trip data in Beijing. The results show that SNN_flow outperforms existing methods in identifying flow clusters with irregular shapes and inhomogeneous distributions. The clusters identified by SNN_flow can reveal human mobility patterns in Beijing. Numéro de notice : A2022-163 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : GEOMATIQUE Nature : Article nature-HAL : ArtAvecCL-RevueIntern DOI : 10.1080/13658816.2021.1899184 Date de publication en ligne : 16/03/2021 En ligne : https://doi.org/10.1080/13658816.2021.1899184 Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=99786
in International journal of geographical information science IJGIS > vol 36 n° 2 (February 2022) . - pp 253 - 279[article]Survival time and mortality rate of regeneration in the deep shade of a primeval beech forest / R. Petrovska in European Journal of Forest Research, vol 141 n° 1 (February 2022)
[article]
Titre : Survival time and mortality rate of regeneration in the deep shade of a primeval beech forest Type de document : Article/Communication Auteurs : R. Petrovska, Auteur ; Harald Bugmann, Auteur ; Martina Lena Hobi, Auteur ; et al., Auteur Année de publication : 2022 Article en page(s) : pp 43 - 58 Note générale : bibliographie Langues : Anglais (eng) Descripteur : [Termes IGN] Acer platanoïdes
[Termes IGN] Acer pseudoplatanus
[Termes IGN] analyse de données
[Termes IGN] arbre mort
[Termes IGN] biomasse aérienne
[Termes IGN] croissance des arbres
[Termes IGN] dendrochronologie
[Termes IGN] échantillonnage
[Termes IGN] Fagus sylvatica
[Termes IGN] forêt primaire
[Termes IGN] Leaf Mass per Area
[Termes IGN] mortalité
[Termes IGN] ombre
[Termes IGN] régénération (sylviculture)
[Termes IGN] Ukraine
[Vedettes matières IGN] SylvicultureRésumé : (auteur) Low mortality rates and slow growth differentiate shade-tolerant from shade-intolerant species and define the survival strategy of juvenile trees growing in deep shade. While radial stem growth has been widely used to explain mortality in juvenile trees, the leaf area ratio (LAR), known to be a key component of shade tolerance, has been neglected so far. We assessed the effects of LAR, radial stem growth and tree height on survival time and the age-specific mortality rate of juvenile Fagus sylvatica L. (European beech), Acer pseudoplatanus L. (sycamore maple) and Acer platanoides L. (Norway maple) in a primeval beech forest (Ukraine). Aboveground and belowground biomass and radial stem growth were analysed for 289 living and 179 dead seedlings and saplings. Compared with the other species, F. sylvatica featured higher LAR, slower growth and a lower mortality rate. The average survival time of F. sylvatica juveniles (72 years) allows it to reach the canopy more often than its competitors in forests with low canopy turnover rate. In contrast, a combination of lower LAR, higher growth rate and higher age-specific mortality rate of the two Acer species resulted in their shorter survival times and thus render their presence in the canopy a rare event. Overall, this study suggests that shade tolerance, commonly defined as a relationship between sapling mortality and growth, can alternatively be formulated as a relationship between survival time and the interplay of growth and LAR. Numéro de notice : A2022-199 Affiliation des auteurs : non IGN Thématique : FORET Nature : Article DOI : 10.1007/s10342-021-01427-3 Date de publication en ligne : 05/11/2021 En ligne : https://doi.org/10.1007/s10342-021-01427-3 Format de la ressource électronique : URL article Permalink : https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=100000
in European Journal of Forest Research > vol 141 n° 1 (February 2022) . - pp 43 - 58[article]Synergistic use of particle swarm optimization, artificial neural network, and extreme gradient boosting algorithms for urban LULC mapping from WorldView-3 images / Alireza Hamedianfar in Geocarto international, vol 37 n° 3 ([01/02/2022])PermalinkThree-Dimensional point cloud analysis for building seismic damage information / Fan Yang in Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing, PERS, vol 88 n° 2 (February 2022)Permalink3D modeling of urban area based on oblique UAS images - An end-to-end pipeline / Valeria-Ersilia Oniga in Remote sensing, vol 14 n° 2 (January-2 2022)PermalinkSemantic segmentation of land cover from high resolution multispectral satellite images by spectral-spatial convolutional neural network / Ekrem Saralioglu in Geocarto international, vol 37 n° 2 ([15/01/2022])PermalinkVariable selection for estimating individual tree height using genetic algorithm and random forest / Evandro Nunes Miranda in Forest ecology and management, vol 504 (January-15 2022)PermalinkPermalinkAbove-ground biomass estimation in a Mediterranean sparse coppice oak forest using Sentinel-2 data / Fardin Moradi in Annals of forest research, vol 65 n° 1 (January - June 2022)PermalinkPermalinkAn assessment of forest loss and its drivers in protected areas on the Copperbelt province of Zambia: 1972–2016 / Darius Phiri in Geomatics, Natural Hazards and Risk, vol 13 (2022)PermalinkAn extended patch-based cellular automaton to simulate horizontal and vertical urban growth under the shared socioeconomic pathways / Yimin Chen in Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, vol 91 (January 2022)PermalinkAnalyse contrastive de la perception de la ville entre fictions climatiques et débats publics / Alexandra Li–Combeau-Longuet (2022)PermalinkAnalysis of pedestrian movements and gestures using an on-board camera to predict their intentions / Joseph Gesnouin (2022)PermalinkApplication of deep learning with stratified K-fold for vegetation species discrimation in a protected mountainous region using Sentinel-2 image / Efosa Gbenga Adagbasa in Geocarto international, vol 37 n° 1 ([01/01/2022])PermalinkApprentissage de représentations et modèles génératifs profonds dans les systèmes dynamiques / Jean-Yves Franceschi (2022)PermalinkAttributing pedestrian networks with semantic information based on multi-source spatial data / Xue Yang in International journal of geographical information science IJGIS, vol 36 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkAttributs de texture extraits d'images multispectrales acquises en conditions d'éclairage non contrôlées : application à l'agriculture de précision / Anis Amziane (2022)PermalinkA benchmark of named entity recognition approaches in historical documents : application to 19th century French directories / Nathalie Abadie (2022)PermalinkClassification of mediterranean shrub species from UAV point clouds / Juan Pedro Carbonell-Rivera in Remote sensing, vol 14 n° 1 (January-1 2022)PermalinkCombining a class-weighted algorithm and machine learning models in landslide susceptibility mapping: A case study of Wanzhou section of the Three Gorges Reservoir, China / Huijuan Zhang in Computers & geosciences, vol 158 (January 2022)PermalinkConstruction d’un plugin QGIS de détection d’îlots de chaleur urbains à partir d’images satellitaires de type optique / Houssayn Meriche (2022)PermalinkContribution to object extraction in cartography : A novel deep learning-based solution to recognise, segment and post-process the road transport network as a continuous geospatial element in high-resolution aerial orthoimagery / Calimanut-Ionut Cira (2022)PermalinkConventional and neural network-based water vapor density model for GNSS troposphere tomography / Chen Liu in GPS solutions, vol 26 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkPermalinkCultivating historical heritage area vitality using urban morphology approach based on big data and machine learning / Jiayu Wu in Computers, Environment and Urban Systems, vol 91 (January 2022)PermalinkDeep image translation with an affinity-based change prior for unsupervised multimodal change detection / Luigi Tommaso Luppino in IEEE Transactions on geoscience and remote sensing, vol 60 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkPermalinkPermalinkPermalinkPermalinkPermalinkPermalinkPermalinkDetection of windthrown tree stems on UAV-orthomosaics using U-Net convolutional networks / Stefan Reder in Remote sensing, vol 14 n° 1 (January-1 2022)PermalinkDétection des prairies de fauche et estimation des périodes de fauche par télédétection / Emma Seneschal (2022)PermalinkPermalinkEffective triplet mining improves training of multi-scale pooled CNN for image retrieval / Federico Vaccaro in Machine Vision and Applications, vol 33 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkÉléments pour l'analyse et le traitement d'images : application à l'estimation de la qualité du bois / Rémy Decelle (2022)PermalinkEstimating aboveground biomass in dense Hyrcanian forests by the use of Sentinel-2 data / Fardin Moradi in Forests, vol 13 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkPermalinkÉvolution rétrospective et prospective d’un massif dunaire par imagerie multispectrale et LiDAR / Iris Jeuffrard (2022)PermalinkExploring data fusion for multi-object detection for intelligent transportation systems using deep learning / Amira Mimouna (2022)PermalinkFLAIR: French Land cover from Aerial ImageRy - Challenge FLAIR #1: semantic segmentation and domain adaptation / Anatol Garioud (2022)PermalinkForest fire susceptibility assessment using Google Earth engine in Gangwon-do, Republic of Korea / Yong Piao in Geomatics, Natural Hazards and Risk, vol 13 (2022)PermalinkPermalinkGénération d’un jeu de données d’entraînement et mise en oeuvre d’une architecture de détection par deep learning des numéros de parcelles sur les plans du cadastre Napoléonien / Tiecoumba Ibrahim Tamela (2022)PermalinkPermalinkA GIS-based landslide susceptibility mapping and variable importance analysis using artificial intelligent training-based methods / Pengxiang Zhao in Remote sensing, vol 14 n° 1 (January-1 2022)PermalinkGlobal canopy height regression and uncertainty estimation from GEDI LIDAR waveforms with deep ensembles / Nico Lang in Remote sensing of environment, vol 268 (January 2022)PermalinkHistograms of oriented mosaic gradients for snapshot spectral image description / Lulu Chen in ISPRS Journal of photogrammetry and remote sensing, vol 183 (January 2022)PermalinkHourly rainfall forecast model using supervised learning algorithm / Qingzhi Zhao in IEEE Transactions on geoscience and remote sensing, vol 60 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkIdentifying map users with eye movement data from map-based spatial tasks: user privacy concerns / Hua Liao in Cartography and Geographic Information Science, vol 49 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkImproving local adaptive filtering method employed in radiometric correction of analogue airborne campaigns / Lâmân Lelégard (2022)PermalinkImproving LSMA for impervious surface estimation in an urban area / Jin Wang in European journal of remote sensing, vol 55 n° 1 (2022)PermalinkPermalinkInteractive semantic segmentation of aerial images with deep neural networks / Gaston Lenczner (2022)PermalinkLearning multi-view aggregation in the wild for large-scale 3D semantic segmentation / Damien Robert (2022)PermalinkLearning spatio-temporal representations of satellite time series for large-scale crop mapping / Vivien Sainte Fare Garnot (2022)PermalinkPermalinkMLMT-CNN for object detection and segmentation in multi-layer and multi-spectral images / Majedaldein Almahasneh in Machine Vision and Applications, vol 33 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkModeling of precipitable water vapor from GPS observations using machine learning and tomography methods / Mir Reza Ghaffari Razin in Advances in space research, vol 69 n° 7 (April 2022)PermalinkMonitoring forest-savanna dynamics in the Guineo-Congolian transition area of the centre region of Cameroon / Le Bienfaiteur Sagang Takougoum (2022)PermalinkMonitoring grassland dynamics by exploiting multi-modal satellite image time series / Anatol Garioud (2022)PermalinkMonitoring leaf phenology in moist tropical forests by applying a superpixel-based deep learning method to time-series images of tree canopies / Guangqin Song in ISPRS Journal of photogrammetry and remote sensing, vol 183 (January 2022)PermalinkMulti-criteria geographic analysis for automated cartographic generalization / Guillaume Touya in Cartographic journal (the), vol 59 n° 1 (February 2022)PermalinkMulti-view urban scene classification with a complementary-information learning model / Wanxuan Geng in Photogrammetric Engineering & Remote Sensing, PERS, vol 88 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkA new method for the attribution of breakpoints in segmentation of IWV difference time series / Khanh Ninh Nguyen (2022)PermalinkNovel fuzzy clustering algorithm with variable multi-pixel fitting spatial information for image segmentation / Hang Zhang in Pattern recognition, vol 121 (January 2022)PermalinkA novel unmixing-based hypersharpening method via convolutional neural network / Xiaochen Lu in IEEE Transactions on geoscience and remote sensing, vol 60 n° 1 (January 2022)PermalinkNumérique versus symbolique : dialogue ontologique entre deux approches / Hélène Mathian in Revue internationale de géomatique, vol 31 n° 1-2 (janvier - juin 2022)PermalinkPermalinkOptimization of deep neural networks: A functional perspective with applications in image classification / Simon Roburin (2022)PermalinkA PCA-PD fusion method for change detection in remote sensing multi temporal images / Soltana Achour in Geocarto international, vol 37 n° 1 ([01/01/2022])PermalinkPedestrian trajectory prediction with convolutional neural networks / Simone Zamboni in Pattern recognition, vol 121 (January 2022)PermalinkPhotogrammetric point clouds: quality assessment, filtering, and change detection / Zhenchao Zhang (2022)PermalinkPlanning coastal Mediterranean stone pine (Pinus pinea L.) reforestations as a green infrastructure: combining GIS techniques and statistical analysis to identify management options / Luigi Portoghesi in Annals of forest research, vol 65 n° 1 (January - June 2022)PermalinkPotentialité de la télédétection thermique pour la modélisation climatique en milieu viticole / Gwenaël Morin (2022)PermalinkA prediction model for surface deformation caused by underground mining based on spatio-temporal associations / Min Ren in Geomatics, Natural Hazards and Risk, vol 13 (2022)PermalinkA rapid assessment method for earthquake-induced landslide casualties based on GIS and logistic regression model / Yuqian Dai in Geomatics, Natural Hazards and Risk, vol 13 (2022)PermalinkPermalinkRemise en forme des données géographiques des biotopes en milieu ouvert du Luxembourg / Alexandre Nghien (2022)PermalinkPermalinkPermalinkSelf-attention and generative adversarial networks for algae monitoring / Nhut Hai Huynh in European journal of remote sensing, vol 55 n° 1 (2022)PermalinkSemantic segmentation of high-resolution remote sensing images based on a class feature attention mechanism fused with Deeplabv3+ / Zhimin Wang in Computers & geosciences, vol 158 (January 2022)PermalinkSpatial distribution of lead (Pb) in soil: a case study in a contaminated area of the Czech Republic / Nicolas Francos in Geomatics, Natural Hazards and Risk, vol 13 (2022)PermalinkTowards synthetic sensing for smart cities : a machine/deep learning-based approach / Faraz Malik Awan (2022)PermalinkTowards urban flood susceptibility mapping using data-driven models in Berlin, Germany / Omar Seleem in Geomatics, Natural Hazards and Risk, vol 13 (2022)PermalinkPermalinkUnsupervised generative models for data analysis and explainable artificial intelligence / Mohanad Abukmeil (2022)PermalinkPermalinkApplication of a hand-held LiDAR scanner for the urban cadastral detail survey in digitized cadastral area of Taiwan urban city / Shih-Hong Chio in Remote sensing, vol 13 n° 24 (December-2 2021)PermalinkEfficient occluded road extraction from high-resolution remote sensing imagery / Dejun Feng in Remote sensing, vol 13 n° 24 (December-2 2021)PermalinkAutomatic extraction of indoor spatial information from floor plan image: A patch-based deep learning methodology application on large-scale complex buildings / Hyunjung Kim in ISPRS International journal of geo-information, vol 10 n° 12 (December 2021)PermalinkBuilding detection with convolutional networks trained with transfer learning / Simon Šanca in Geodetski vestnik, vol 65 n° 4 (December 2021 - February 2022)PermalinkA comparative approach of support vector machine kernel functions for GIS-based landslide susceptibility mapping / Khalil Valizadeh Kamran in Applied geomatics, vol 13 n° 4 (December 2021)Permalink