6533b7d8fe1ef96bd1269944
RESEARCH PRODUCT
A Comparison of Advanced Regression Algorithms for Quantifying Urban Land Cover
Sebastian Van Der LindenAkpona OkujeniPatrick HostertAndreas RabeBenjamin JakimowJochem Verrelstsubject
Computer scienceLand coverimaging spectrometrysub-pixel mappingKernel (linear algebra)urban land coverPartial least squares regressionlcsh:Sciencespatial resolutionHyMapRemote sensingmachine learning; regression; sub-pixel mapping; spatial resolution; imaging spectrometry; hyperspectral; urban land coverTraining setArtificial neural networkbusiness.industryHyperspectral imagingPattern recognitionRandom forestSupport vector machineKernel methodmachine learninghyperspectralKernel (statistics)General Earth and Planetary Sciencesregressionlcsh:QArtificial intelligencebusinessdescription
Quantitative methods for mapping sub-pixel land cover fractions are gaining increasing attention, particularly with regard to upcoming hyperspectral satellite missions. We evaluated five advanced regression algorithms combined with synthetically mixed training data for quantifying urban land cover from HyMap data at 3.6 and 9 m spatial resolution. Methods included support vector regression (SVR), kernel ridge regression (KRR), artificial neural networks (NN), random forest regression (RFR) and partial least squares regression (PLSR). Our experiments demonstrate that both kernel methods SVR and KRR yield high accuracies for mapping complex urban surface types, i.e., rooftops, pavements, grass- and tree-covered areas. SVR and KRR models proved to be stable with regard to the spatial and spectral differences between both images and effectively utilized the higher complexity of the synthetic training mixtures for improving estimates for coarser resolution data. Observed deficiencies mainly relate to known problems arising from spectral similarities or shadowing. The remaining regressors either revealed erratic (NN) or limited (RFR and PLSR) performances when comprehensively mapping urban land cover. Our findings suggest that the combination of kernel-based regression methods, such as SVR and KRR, with synthetically mixed training data is well suited for quantifying urban land cover from imaging spectrometer data at multiple scales.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-07-07 | Remote Sensing |