Remote Sensing (Jun 2023)

Assessing Transferability of Remote Sensing Pasture Estimates Using Multiple Machine Learning Algorithms and Evaluation Structures

  • Hunter D. Smith,
  • Jose C. B. Dubeux,
  • Alina Zare,
  • Chris H. Wilson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15112940
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 11
p. 2940

Abstract

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Both the vastness of pasturelands and the value they contain—e.g., food security, ecosystem services—have resulted in increased scientific and industry efforts to remotely monitor them via satellite imagery and machine learning (ML). However, the transferability of these models is uncertain, as modelers commonly train and test on site-specific or homogenized—i.e., randomly partitioned—datasets and choose complex ML algorithms with increased potential to overfit a limited dataset. In this study, we evaluated the accuracy and transferability of remote sensing pasture models, using multiple ML algorithms and evaluation structures. Specifically, we predicted pasture above-ground biomass and nitrogen concentration from Sentinel-2 imagery. The implemented ML algorithms include principal components regression (PCR), partial least squares regression (PLSR), least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO), random forest (RF), support vector machine regression (SVR), and a gradient boosting model (GBM). The evaluation structures were determined using levels of spatial and temporal dissimilarity to partition the train and test datasets. Our results demonstrated a general decline in accuracy as evaluation structures increase in spatiotemporal dissimilarity. In addition, the more simplistic algorithms—PCR, PLSR, and LASSO—out-performed the more complex models RF, SVR, and GBM for the prediction of dissimilar evaluation structures. We conclude that multi-spectral satellite and pasture physiological variable datasets, such as the one presented in this study, contain spatiotemporal internal dependence, which makes the generalization of predictive models to new localities challenging, especially for complex ML algorithms. Further studies on this topic should include the assessment of model transferability by using dissimilar evaluation structures, and we expect generalization to improve for larger and denser datasets.

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