Abstract

Abstract. Building collapse is a major cause of casualties after an earthquake, so accurately extracting building damage information is critical for post-earthquake assessment and rescue. Currently, most deep learning methods focus on the end-to-end detection of building collapse. However, in real-world earthquake scenarios, the end-to-end computational process often lacks flexibility and struggles to meet the requirements of rapid emergency response. To address this issue, this paper proposes a cascaded framework that combines pre-earthquake building extraction and post-earthquake building damage classification. The proposed framework includes two sections: (1) Progressive building semantic segmentation model in the joint frequency domain. This model is designed to accurately extract buildings prior to an earthquake, with the goal of minimizing error propagation throughout the cascading process. The model addresses the spatial similarity of buildings under complicated backgrounds, as well as the high internal heterogeneity of buildings, by utilizing frequency domain techniques. It compensates for the shortcomings of traditional models in terms of incomplete information extraction through the effective integration of global and local information. Finally, the model employs edge priors for edge regularization. (2) Rapid building damage classification process. Based on the accurate building extraction results, a fast and efficient classification process is developed. This process uses a simple and lightweight classification network to effectively extract building damage information caused by the earthquake. The superiority of the proposed framework is validated through comparison with traditional cascading architectures and end-to-end models. The results show that the cascading framework not only provides accurate pre-earthquake building extraction, but also enables efficient and accurate post-earthquake damage classification, which meets the requirements of rapid post-earthquake emergency response. This balance of accuracy and speed is essential for effective disaster management and recovery.

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