Abstract
Distress measurement is essential in pavement management. Image-based distress identification is increasingly becoming an integral part of traffic speed network-level road condition surveys. This allows an aggregated summary of road conditions over the whole network, so it does not require an exact distress location within the lane. In this context, multi-label classification (MLC), based on convolutional neural networks (CNN), is proposed as a potential solution for distress identification from a network-level right-of-way (ROW) video survey. MLC has the advantage of low computing resource consumption, as it is implemented from lightweight classification networks. In this work, the developed MLC models used three different CNN architectures (VGG16, ResNet-34, and ResNet-50) to detect potholes, cracks, patches, and bleeding. The best model obtained 97% average accuracy with an F1-score of 93% in distress identification despite the variability in imaging hardware. This makes it possible to generalize the classification algorithm, allowing versatile applications and incorporating it into network-level pavement management systems. This model has good potential for fast and accurate distress identification from a video survey, avoiding the need for various types of expensive sensors like laser scanners.
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More From: Transportation Research Record: Journal of the Transportation Research Board
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