Abstract

Parcel-based crop classification using multi-temporal satellite optical images plays a vital role in precision agriculture. However, optical image sequences may be incomplete due to the occlusion of clouds and shadows. Thus, exploring inherent time-series features to identify crop types from incomplete optical image sequences is a significant challenge. This study developed a contrastive-learning-based framework for time-series feature representation to improve crop classification using incomplete Sentinel-2 image sequences. Central to this method was the combined use of inherent time-series feature representation and machine-learning-based classifications. First, preprocessed multi-temporal Sentinel-2 satellite images were overlaid onto precise farmland parcel maps to generate raw time-series spectral features (with missing values) for each parcel. Second, an enhanced contrastive learning model was established to map the raw time-series spectral features to their inherent feature representation (without missing values). Thirdly, eXtreme Gradient-Boosting-based and Long Short-Term Memory-based classifiers were applied to feature representation to produce crop classification maps. The proposed method is further discussed and validated through parcel-based time-series crop classifications in two study areas (one in Dijon of France and the other in Zhaosu of China) with multi-temporal Sentinel-2 images in comparison to the existing methods. The classification results, demonstrating significant improvements greater than 3% in overall accuracy and 0.04 in F1 scores over comparison methods, indicate the effectiveness of the proposed contrastive-learning-based time-series feature representation for parcel-based crop classification utilizing incomplete Sentinel-2 image sequences.

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