Abstract

This paper presents an unsupervised approach that extracts reliable labeled units from outdated maps to update them using time series (TS) of recent multispectral (MS) images. The method assumes that: 1) the source of the map is unknown and may be different from remote sensing data; 2) no ground truth is available; 3) the map is provided at polygon level, where the polygon label represents the dominant class; and 4) the map legend can be converted into a set of classes discriminable with the TS of images (i.e., no land-use classes that require manual analysis are considered). First, the outdated map is adapted to the spatial and spectral properties of the MS images. Then, the method identifies reliable labeled units in an unsupervised way by a two-step procedure: 1) a clustering analysis performed at polygon level to detect samples correctly associated to their labels and 2) a consistency analysis to discard polygons far from the distribution of the related land-cover class (i.e., having high probability of being mislabeled). Finally, the map is updated by classifying the recent TS of MS image with an ensemble of classifiers trained using only the reference data derived from the map. The experimental results obtained updating the 2012 Corine Land Cover (CLC) and the GlobLand30 in Trentino Alto Adige (Italy) achieved 93.2% and 93.3% overall accuracy (OA) on the validation data set. The method increased the OA up to 18% and 11.5% with respect to the reference methods on the 2012 CLC and the GlobLand30, respectively.

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