Identifying cropland non-agriculturalization with high representational consistency from bi-temporal high-resolution remote sensing images: From benchmark datasets to real-world application
Zhendong Sun , Yanfei Zhong , Xinyu Wang , Liangpei Zhang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Cropland non-agriculturalization (CNA) refers to the conversion of cropland into construction land, woodland/garden/grassland, water body, or other non-agricultural land, which ultimately disrupts local agroecosystems and the cultivation and production of crops. Remote sensing technology is an important tool for large-area CNA detection, and remote sensing based methods that can be used for this task include the time-series analysis method and change detection from bi-temporal images. In particular, change detection methods using high-resolution remote sensing imagery have great potential for CNA detection, but enormous challenges do still remain. The large intra-class variance of cropland with different phenological stages and planting patterns leads to cropland areas being difficult to identify effectively, while certain features can be misidentified because they are similar to cropland, resulting in false alarms and missed detections in the results. There is also a lack of large-scale CNA datasets covering multiple change scenarios as data support. To address these problems, a lightweight model focused on CNA detection (CNANet) is proposed in this paper. Specifically, the uniquely crafted represent-consist-enhance (RCE) module is seamlessly integrated between the encoder and decoder components of CNANet to perform a contrast operation on the deep features extracted by the feature extractor. The RCE module is specifically designed to aggregate multiple cropland representations and extend the cropland representations from the confusing background, to achieve the purpose of reducing the intra-class reflectance differences and enhancing the model’s perception of cropland. In addition, a large-scale high-resolution cropland non-agriculturalization (Hi-CNA) dataset was built for the CNA identification task, with a total of 6797 pairs of 512 × 512 images with semantic annotations. Compared to the existing datasets, the Hi-CNA dataset has the advantages of multiple phenological stages, multiple change scenarios, and multiple annotation types, in addition to the large data volume. The experimental results obtained in this study show that the benchmark methods tested on the Hi-CNA dataset can all achieve a good accuracy, proving the high-quality annotation of the dataset. The overall accuracy and F1-score of CNANet with the default settings reach 93.81 % and 78.9 %, respectively, achieving a superior accuracy, compared to the other benchmark methods, and demonstrating stronger perception of cropland changes. In addition, in two selected verification regions within the large-scale real-world CNA mapping results, the F1-score is 83.61 % and 50.87 %. The Hi-CNA can be downloaded from http://rsidea.whu.edu.cn/Hi-CNA_dataset.htm.
期刊介绍:
The ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (P&RS) serves as the official journal of the International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ISPRS). It acts as a platform for scientists and professionals worldwide who are involved in various disciplines that utilize photogrammetry, remote sensing, spatial information systems, computer vision, and related fields. The journal aims to facilitate communication and dissemination of advancements in these disciplines, while also acting as a comprehensive source of reference and archive.
P&RS endeavors to publish high-quality, peer-reviewed research papers that are preferably original and have not been published before. These papers can cover scientific/research, technological development, or application/practical aspects. Additionally, the journal welcomes papers that are based on presentations from ISPRS meetings, as long as they are considered significant contributions to the aforementioned fields.
In particular, P&RS encourages the submission of papers that are of broad scientific interest, showcase innovative applications (especially in emerging fields), have an interdisciplinary focus, discuss topics that have received limited attention in P&RS or related journals, or explore new directions in scientific or professional realms. It is preferred that theoretical papers include practical applications, while papers focusing on systems and applications should include a theoretical background.