Abstract

The presence of shadows in remote sensing images leads to misinterpretation of objects and a wrong discrimination of the targets of interest, therefore, limiting the use of several imaging applications. An automatic area-based approach for shadow detection is proposed, which combines spatial and spectral features into a unified and flexible approach. Potential shadow-pixels candidates are identified using morphological-based operators, in particular, black-top-hat transformations as well as area injunction strategies as computed by the well-established normalized saturation-value difference index. The obtained output is a shadow mask, refined in the last step of our method in order to reduce misclassified pixels. Experiments over a large dataset formed by more than 200 scenes of very high-resolution images covering the metropolitan urban area of Sao Paulo city are performed, where the images are collected from the WorldView-2 (WV-2) and Pleiades-1B (PL-1B) sensors. As verified by an extensive battery of tests, the proposed method provides a good level of discrimination between shadow and nonshadow pixels, with an overall accuracy up to 94.2%, for WV-2, and 90.84%, for PL-1B. Comparative results also attested that the designed approach is very competitive against representative state-of-the-art methods and it can be used for further shadow removal-dependent applications.

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