Abstract

To address the cost issue associated with pixel-level image annotation in fully supervised semantic segmentation, a method based on semi-supervised semantic segmentation is proposed for extracting winter wheat planting areas. This approach utilizes self-training with pseudo-labels to learn from a small set of images with pixel-level annotations and a large set of unlabeled images, thereby achieving the extraction. In the constructed initial dataset, a random sampling strategy is employed to select 1/16, 1/8, 1/4, and 1/2 proportions of labeled data. Furthermore, in conjunction with the concept of consistency regularization, strong data augmentation techniques are applied to the unlabeled images, surpassing classical methods such as cropping and rotation to construct a semi-supervised model. This effectively alleviates overfitting caused by noisy labels. By comparing the prediction results of different proportions of labeled data using SegNet, DeepLabv3+, and U-Net, it is determined that the U-Net network model yields the best extraction performance. Moreover, the evaluation metrics MPA and MIoU demonstrate varying degrees of improvement for semi-supervised semantic segmentation compared to fully supervised semantic segmentation. Notably, the U-Net model trained with 1/16 labeled data outperforms the models trained with 1/8, 1/4, and 1/2 labeled data, achieving MPA and MIoU scores of 81.63%, 73.31%, 82.50%, and 76.01%, respectively. This method provides valuable insights for extracting winter wheat planting areas in scenarios with limited labeled data.

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