Abstract

Since 2008 more than half of the world population is living in cities and urban sprawl is continuing. Because of these developments, the mapping and monitoring of urban environments and their surroundings is becoming increasingly important. In this study two object-oriented approaches for high-resolution mapping of sealed surfaces are compared: a standard non-hierarchic approach and a full hierarchic approach using both multi-layer perceptrons and decision trees as learning algorithms. Both methods outperform the standard nearest neighbour classifier, which is used as a benchmark scenario. For the multi-layer perceptron approach, applying a hierarchic classification strategy substantially increases the accuracy of the classification. For the decision tree approach a one-against-all hierarchic classification strategy does not lead to an improvement of classification accuracy compared to the standard all-against-all approach. Best results are obtained with the hierarchic multi-layer perceptron classification strategy, producing a kappa value of 0.77. A simple shadow reclassification procedure based on characteristics of neighbouring objects further increases the kappa value to 0.84.

Highlights

  • Since 2008 more than half of the world population – 3.3 billion people – is living in cities

  • Two different objectoriented classification scenarios were tested on an Ikonos image of an urban fringe area, covering part of the city of Ghent, Belgium, using both multi-layer perceptron (MLP) and decision tree (DT)

  • Four object-oriented classification strategies for the mapping of sealed surfaces were tested on Ikonos data for part of the rural-urban fringe of the city of Ghent (Belgium)

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Summary

Introduction

Since 2008 more than half of the world population – 3.3 billion people – is living in cities. By 2030 this number will have increased to almost 5 billion [1]. Because of the population increase, and because of the changing lifestyle, the built-up areas are growing rapidly. People tend to use more space and that is why, in the last 20 years, while the population only increased by 6%, the built-up area increased by 20%. This urban sprawl is mainly occurring in regions with a high population density and economic activity [2]

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