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The integration of spectral and textual information using neural networks for land cover mapping in the Mediterranean

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The integration of spectral and textual information using neural networks for land cover mapping in the Mediterranean. / Berberoglu, S.; Lloyd, Christopher D.; Atkinson, P.M. et al.
In: Computers and Geosciences, Vol. 26, No. 4, 05.2000, p. 385-396.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Berberoglu S, Lloyd CD, Atkinson PM, Curran PJ. The integration of spectral and textual information using neural networks for land cover mapping in the Mediterranean. Computers and Geosciences. 2000 May;26(4):385-396. Epub 2000 Mar 20. doi: 10.1016/S0098-3004(99)00119-3

Author

Berberoglu, S. ; Lloyd, Christopher D. ; Atkinson, P.M. et al. / The integration of spectral and textual information using neural networks for land cover mapping in the Mediterranean. In: Computers and Geosciences. 2000 ; Vol. 26, No. 4. pp. 385-396.

Bibtex

@article{f1e3840386fa4446babb0f96d2197175,
title = "The integration of spectral and textual information using neural networks for land cover mapping in the Mediterranean",
abstract = "The aim of this study was to develop an efficient and accurate procedure for classifying Mediterranean land cover with remotely sensed data. Combinations of artificial neural networks (ANN) and texture analysis on a per-field basis were used to classify a Landsat Thematic Mapper image of the Cukurova Deltas, Turkey, into eight land cover classes. This study integrated spectral information with measures of texture, in the form of the variance and the variogram. The accuracy of the ANN was greater than that of maximum likelihood (ML) when using spectral data alone and when using spectral and textural data. The use of texture measures through the per-pixel and per-field majority rule approaches were found to reduce classification accuracy because the field boundaries were enlarged and so overwhelmed the measures of texture. In contrast, the per-field approach (where the field was specified prior to analysis) combined with texture information increased significantly classification accuracy. However, the accuracy decreased as the variogram lag increased. The accuracy with which land cover could be classified in this region was maximised at 89% by using a per-field, ANN approach in which semivariance at a lag of 1 pixel was incorporated as textural information. This is 15% greater than the accuracy achieved using a standard per-pixel ML classification. The primary limitation of the use of the per-field approach was noted to be the need for prior knowledge of field boundaries which may be resolved using existing data or through some form of edge-detection routine.",
keywords = "Per-field classification, Variogram, Artificial neural network",
author = "S. Berberoglu and Lloyd, {Christopher D.} and P.M. Atkinson and Curran, {Paul J.}",
year = "2000",
month = may,
doi = "10.1016/S0098-3004(99)00119-3",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "385--396",
journal = "Computers and Geosciences",
issn = "0098-3004",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The integration of spectral and textual information using neural networks for land cover mapping in the Mediterranean

AU - Berberoglu, S.

AU - Lloyd, Christopher D.

AU - Atkinson, P.M.

AU - Curran, Paul J.

PY - 2000/5

Y1 - 2000/5

N2 - The aim of this study was to develop an efficient and accurate procedure for classifying Mediterranean land cover with remotely sensed data. Combinations of artificial neural networks (ANN) and texture analysis on a per-field basis were used to classify a Landsat Thematic Mapper image of the Cukurova Deltas, Turkey, into eight land cover classes. This study integrated spectral information with measures of texture, in the form of the variance and the variogram. The accuracy of the ANN was greater than that of maximum likelihood (ML) when using spectral data alone and when using spectral and textural data. The use of texture measures through the per-pixel and per-field majority rule approaches were found to reduce classification accuracy because the field boundaries were enlarged and so overwhelmed the measures of texture. In contrast, the per-field approach (where the field was specified prior to analysis) combined with texture information increased significantly classification accuracy. However, the accuracy decreased as the variogram lag increased. The accuracy with which land cover could be classified in this region was maximised at 89% by using a per-field, ANN approach in which semivariance at a lag of 1 pixel was incorporated as textural information. This is 15% greater than the accuracy achieved using a standard per-pixel ML classification. The primary limitation of the use of the per-field approach was noted to be the need for prior knowledge of field boundaries which may be resolved using existing data or through some form of edge-detection routine.

AB - The aim of this study was to develop an efficient and accurate procedure for classifying Mediterranean land cover with remotely sensed data. Combinations of artificial neural networks (ANN) and texture analysis on a per-field basis were used to classify a Landsat Thematic Mapper image of the Cukurova Deltas, Turkey, into eight land cover classes. This study integrated spectral information with measures of texture, in the form of the variance and the variogram. The accuracy of the ANN was greater than that of maximum likelihood (ML) when using spectral data alone and when using spectral and textural data. The use of texture measures through the per-pixel and per-field majority rule approaches were found to reduce classification accuracy because the field boundaries were enlarged and so overwhelmed the measures of texture. In contrast, the per-field approach (where the field was specified prior to analysis) combined with texture information increased significantly classification accuracy. However, the accuracy decreased as the variogram lag increased. The accuracy with which land cover could be classified in this region was maximised at 89% by using a per-field, ANN approach in which semivariance at a lag of 1 pixel was incorporated as textural information. This is 15% greater than the accuracy achieved using a standard per-pixel ML classification. The primary limitation of the use of the per-field approach was noted to be the need for prior knowledge of field boundaries which may be resolved using existing data or through some form of edge-detection routine.

KW - Per-field classification

KW - Variogram

KW - Artificial neural network

U2 - 10.1016/S0098-3004(99)00119-3

DO - 10.1016/S0098-3004(99)00119-3

M3 - Journal article

VL - 26

SP - 385

EP - 396

JO - Computers and Geosciences

JF - Computers and Geosciences

SN - 0098-3004

IS - 4

ER -