6533b86dfe1ef96bd12c9665

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Fusing optical and SAR time series for LAI gap filling with multioutput Gaussian processes

Eatidal AminLuca PipiaSantiago BeldaJordi Muñoz-maríGustau Camps-vallsJochem Verrelst

subject

Synthetic aperture radarFOS: Computer and information sciencesComputer Science - Machine LearningTeledetecció010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesMean squared error0208 environmental biotechnologySoil ScienceFOS: Physical sciencesMachine Learning (stat.ML)02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesArticlelaw.inventionMachine Learning (cs.LG)symbols.namesakelawStatistics - Machine LearningFOS: Electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringComputers in Earth SciencesRadarLeaf area indexCluster analysisGaussian process0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensingMathematicsImage and Video Processing (eess.IV)Processos estocàsticsGeologyElectrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video ProcessingSensor fusionRegression020801 environmental engineeringPhysics - Data Analysis Statistics and ProbabilitysymbolsData Analysis Statistics and Probability (physics.data-an)Imatges Processament

description

The availability of satellite optical information is often hampered by the natural presence of clouds, which can be problematic for many applications. Persistent clouds over agricultural fields can mask key stages of crop growth, leading to unreliable yield predictions. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) provides all-weather imagery which can potentially overcome this limitation, but given its high and distinct sensitivity to different surface properties, the fusion of SAR and optical data still remains an open challenge. In this work, we propose the use of Multi-Output Gaussian Process (MOGP) regression, a machine learning technique that learns automatically the statistical relationships among multisensor time series, to detect vegetated areas over which the synergy between SAR-optical imageries is profitable. For this purpose, we use the Sentinel-1 Radar Vegetation Index (RVI) and Sentinel-2 Leaf Area Index (LAI) time series over a study area in north west of the Iberian peninsula. Through a physical interpretation of MOGP trained models, we show its ability to provide estimations of LAI even over cloudy periods using the information shared with RVI, which guarantees the solution keeps always tied to real measurements. Results demonstrate the advantage of MOGP especially for long data gaps, where optical-based methods notoriously fail. The leave-one-image-out assessment technique applied to the whole vegetation cover shows MOGP predictions improve standard GP estimations over short-time gaps (R$^2$ of 74\% vs 68\%, RMSE of 0.4 vs 0.44 $[m^2m^{-2}]$) and especially over long-time gaps (R$^2$ of 33\% vs 12\%, RMSE of 0.5 vs 1.09 $[m^2m^{-2}]$).

10.1016/j.rse.2019.111452https://hdl.handle.net/10550/76590