Abstract

Accurate information on crop distribution is of great importance for a range of applications including crop yield estimation, greenhouse gas emission measurement and management policy formulation. Fine spatial resolution (FSR) remotely sensed imagery provides new opportunities for crop mapping at a detailed level. However, crop classification from FSR imagery is known to be challenging due to the great intra-class variability and low inter-class disparity in the data. In this research, a novel hybrid method (OSVM-OCNN) was proposed for crop classification from FSR imagery, which combines a shallow-structured object-based support vector machine (OSVM) with a deep-structured object-based convolutional neural network (OCNN). Unlike pixel-wise classification methods, the OSVM-OCNN method operates on objects as the basic units of analysis and, thus, classifies remotely sensed images at the object level. The proposed OSVM-OCNN harvests the complementary characteristics of the two sub-models, the OSVM with effective extraction of low-level within-object features and the OCNN with capture and utilization of high-level between-object information. By using a rule-based fusion strategy based primarily on the OCNN’s prediction probability, the two sub-models were fused in a concise and effective manner. We investigated the effectiveness of the proposed method over two test sites (i.e., S1 and S2) that have distinctive and heterogeneous patterns of different crops in the Sacramento Valley, California, using FSR Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) and FSR multispectral data, respectively. Experimental results illustrated that the new proposed OSVM-OCNN approach increased markedly the classification accuracy for most of crop types in S1 and all crop types in S2, and it consistently achieved the most accurate accuracy in comparison with its two object-based sub-models (OSVM and OCNN) as well as the pixel-wise SVM (PSVM) and CNN (PCNN) methods. Our findings, thus, suggest that the proposed method is as an effective and efficient approach to solve the challenging problem of crop classification using FSR imagery (including from different remotely sensed platforms). More importantly, the OSVM-OCNN method is readily generalisable to other landscape classes and, thus, should provide a general solution to solve the complex FSR image classification problem.

Highlights

  • Accurate crop distribution information from regional-to-global scales is essential for estimating crop yield [1], modelling greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from agriculture [2] and making effective agrarian management policies [3]

  • Developing advanced classification methods for accurate crop mapping and monitoring is of prime concern, especially with a view to exploiting the deep hierarchical features presented in Fine spatial resolution (FSR) imagery

  • We investigated the effectiveness of the proposed approach over two study sites with heterogeneous agriculture landscapes in California, USA, using the FSR UAVSAR and RapidEye imagery

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Summary

Introduction

Accurate crop distribution information from regional-to-global scales is essential for estimating crop yield [1], modelling greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from agriculture [2] and making effective agrarian management policies [3]. Compared with pixel-wise algorithms, object-based image analysis (OBIA) built upon segmented homogeneous objects [15] is preferable for crop classification using FSR remotely sensed images This allows spatial information (e.g., texture, shape) with respect to the objects to be incorporated into the classification process, reducing the salt-and-pepper noise [15]. The major contributions of this research can be summarised as: (1) the shallow architecture SVM and the deep architecture CNN was first found to be complementary to each other in terms of crop classification at the object level; (2) a straightforward rule-based decision fusion strategy was developed to effectively fuse the results of the OSVM and OCNN.

Method
Study Area and Data
Experimental Results
Segmentation Parameter
Model Structure and Parameter Settings
Classification Maps and Visual Assessment
Influence of the Decision Fusion Parameter
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