Abstract

The protection of heritage building communities is of important historical significance, the occurrence of a landslide is related to the safety and stability of the heritage building, and ground monitoring and forecasting are the key steps for the early warning and timely restoration of the heritage building. This study utilizes remote sensing technology to monitor the ground of a cultural heritage building, and employs a Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) network for prediction. Firstly, we conducted ground subsidence monitoring within a specific time series of the study area using heritage remote sensing images and SBAS-InSAR technology. Following the subsidence monitoring, and incorporating an attention mechanism, we effectively localized and extracted features of heritage building clusters within the region. This approach efficiently addresses the challenge of feature identification resulting from the dense distribution of buildings and the similarity between various objects. The results indicate that the maximum subsidence rate in the research area reached −60 mm/year, reached a maximum uplift rate of 45 mm/year, and that the maximum cumulative subsidence reached −65 mm. Secondly, for the multi-level, multi-scale, and class-specific objects in remote sensing images, the LSTM network enables adaptive contextual information during deep and shallow feature extraction. This allows for better contextual modeling and the correlation between predicted and actual results reaches a 0.95 correlation, demonstrating the accurate predictive performance of the LSTM network. In conclusion, both LSTM and SBAS technologies play a crucial role in decision-making for heritage buildings, facilitating effective early warning and disaster mitigation.

Full Text
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