Land Cover Semantic Segmentation Using ResUNet
In this paper we present our work on developing an automated system for land cover classification. This system takes a multiband satellite image of an area as input and outputs the land cover map of the area at the same resolution as the input. For this purpose convolutional machine learning models were trained in the task of predicting the land cover semantic segmentation of satellite images. This is a case of supervised learning. The land cover label data were taken from the CORINE Land Cover inventory and the satellite images were taken from the Copernicus hub. As for the model, U-Net architecture variations were applied. Our area of interest are the Ionian islands (Greece). We created a dataset from scratch covering this particular area. In addition, transfer learning from the BigEarthNet dataset [1] was performed. In [1] simple classification of satellite images into the classes of CLC is performed but not segmentation as we do. However, their models have been trained into a dataset much bigger than ours, so we applied transfer learning using their pretrained models as the first part of out network, utilizing the ability these networks have developed to extract useful features from the satellite images (we transferred a pretrained ResNet50 into a U-Res-Net). Apart from transfer learning other techniques were applied in order to overcome the limitations set by the small size of our area of interest. We used data augmentation (cutting images into overlapping patches, applying random transformations such as rotations and flips) and cross validation. The results are tested on the 3 CLC class hierarchy levels and a comparative study is made on the results of different approaches.
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