Land Use Land Cover Labeling of GLOBE Images Using a Deep Learning Fusion Model

Sensors (Basel). 2022 Sep 13;22(18):6895. doi: 10.3390/s22186895.

Abstract

Most of the land use land cover classification methods presented in the literature have been conducted using satellite remote sensing images. High-resolution aerial imagery is now being used for land cover classification. The Global Learning and Observations to Benefit, the Environment land cover image database, is created by citizen scientists worldwide who use their handheld cameras to take a set of six images per land cover site. These images have clutter due to man-made objects, and the pixel uncertainties result in incorrect labels. The problem of accurate labeling of these land cover images is addressed. An integrated architecture that combines Unet and DeepLabV3 for initial segmentation, followed by a weighted fusion model that combines the segmentation labels, is presented. The land cover images with labels are used for training the deep learning models. The fusion model combines the labels of five images taken from the north, south, east, west, and down directions to assign a unique label to the image sets. 2916 GLOBE images have been labeled with land cover classes using the integrated model with minimal human-in-the-loop annotation. The validation step shows that our architecture of labeling the images results in 90.97% label accuracy. Our fusion model can be used for labeling large databases of land cover classes from RGB images.

Keywords: DeepLab; GLOBE database; UNet; deep learning; fusion model; image segmentation; land use land cover classification.

MeSH terms

  • Deep Learning*
  • Humans
  • Telemetry