Abstract

The proliferation of impervious surfaces results in a series of environmental issues, such as the decrease of vegetated areas and the aggravation of the urban heat island effects. The mapping of impervious surface and its spatial distributions is of significance for the ecological study of urban environment. Currently, the integration of optical and synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data has shown advantages in accurately characterizing impervious surface. However, the fusion mainly occurs at the pixel and feature levels which are subject to influences of data noises and feature selections, respectively. In this paper, an innovative and effective method was developed to extract urban impervious surface by synergistically utilizing optical and SAR images at the decision level. The objective of this paper was to obtain an accurate urban impervious surface map based on the random forest classifier and the evidence theory and to provide a detailed uncertainty analysis accompanying the fused impervious surface maps. In this study, both the GaoFen (GF-1) and Sentinel-1A imagery were first used as independent data sources for mapping urban impervious surfaces. Then additional spectral features and texture features were extracted and integrated with the original GF-1 and Sentinel-1A images in generating impervious surfaces. Finally, based on the Dempster-Shafer (D-S) theory, impervious surfaces were produced by fusing the previously estimated impervious surfaces from different datasets at the decision level. Results showed that impervious surfaces estimated from the combined use of original images and features yielded a higher accuracy than those from the original optical or SAR data. Further validations suggested that optical data was better than SAR data in separating impervious surfaces from non-impervious surfaces. The fused impervious surfaces at the decision level had a higher overall accuracy than those produced independently by optical or SAR data. It was also highlighted that the fusion of GF-1 and Sentinel-1A images reduced the amount of confusions among the low reflectance of impervious surface and water, as well as for low reflectance of bare land. An overall accuracy of 95.33% was achieved for extracting urban impervious surfaces by fused datasets. The spatial distributions of uncertainties provided by the evidence theory displayed a confidence level of at least 75% for the impervious surfaces derived from the fused datasets.

Highlights

  • The rapid growth of urban agglomerations is accompanied by a continuous increase of impervious surface which is of significance to study a range of environmental issues at local, regional, and global scales

  • The overall accuracy of 86.49% with a Kappa coefficient of 0.84 suggested that urban impervious surfaces extracted from the GF-1 image were acceptable

  • The accuracy assessment illustrated that urban impervious surfaces extracted from optical data had a higher classification accuracy (89.68%) than those from synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data (68.80%)

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Summary

Introduction

The rapid growth of urban agglomerations is accompanied by a continuous increase of impervious surface which is of significance to study a range of environmental issues at local, regional, and global scales. Impervious surfaces, such as building rooftops, concrete, and pavement, refer to anthropogenic features through which water cannot penetrate into soils [1,2]. It has been used as an indicator of the degree of urbanization as well as for ecological environment assessment [2,3]. Satellite remote sensing data at medium/coarse spatial resolution, such as Landsat TM/ETM(Thematic Mapper/Enhanced

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