Abstract

Using remote sensing images to identify crop plots and estimate crop planting area is an important part of agricultural remote sensing monitoring. High-resolution remote sensing images can provide rich information regarding texture, tone, shape, and spectrum of ground objects. With the advancement of sensor and information technologies, it is now possible to categorize crops with pinpoint accuracy. This study defines crop mapping as a semantic segmentation problem; therefore, a deep learning method is proposed to identify the distribution of corn and soybean using the differences in the spatial and spectral features of crops. The study area is located in the southwest of the Great Lakes in the United States, where corn and soybean cultivation is concentrated. The proposed attention mechanism deep learning model, A2SegNet, was trained and evaluated using three years of Sentinel-2 data, collected between 2019 and 2021. The experimental results show that this method is able to fully extract the spatial and spectral characteristics of crops, and its classification effect is significantly better than that of the baseline method, and it has better classification performance than other deep learning models. We cross verified the trained model on the test sets of different years through transfer learning in both spatiotemporal and spatial dimensions. Proving the effectiveness of the attention mechanism in the process of knowledge transfer, A2SegNet showed better adaptability.

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