International Journal of Applied Earth Observations and Geoinformation (May 2024)
A framework for automated landslide dating utilizing SAR-Derived Parameters Time-Series, An Enhanced Transformer Model, and Dynamic Thresholding
Abstract
Determining the timing of landslide occurrence is crucial for establishing an accurate, comprehensive and systematic landslide inventory while assessing the potential for reducing landslide risk. Unfortunately, many existing landslide inventories lack temporal information such as the precise time of landslide events. Optical and Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) sensors are the most commonly used remote sensing technologies for landslide detection. Unlike optical sensors, SAR sensors are not affected by cloudy conditions and provide valuable imagery regardless of sunlight availability. Therefore, SAR-derived parameters, i.e., SAR amplitude, interferometric coherence, and polarimetric features (alpha and entropy), offer a higher temporal resolution for detecting landslide occurrence times compared to optical data. Despite the advantages, there is currently no universally accepted automatic method for determining the time of landslide events using SAR data. This is due to the lack of anomaly labels and the high time-series volatility in detecting landslide occurrence times. Despite advances in deep-learning methods for anomaly detection in time-series, only a few of them can address these challenges in our case. In this paper, we propose an unsupervised multivariate transformed-based deep-learning model to automatically and efficiently estimate landslide occurrence times using multivariate SAR-derived parameters time-series analysis. The designed gated relative position can increase robustness and temporal context information, by learning global temporal trends in the time-series. Subsequently, the time-series of the anomaly score derived from the proposed Transformer model is analyzed using an adaptive thresholding strategy to dynamically and automatically mark anomalies related to the landslide occurrence. Our research focuses on collapsed landslides characterized by dramatic changes in ground surface topography, with a particular attention for the need of a prior knowledge about landslide boundaries. We assess the performance of the proposed methodology for several collapsed landslides including the July 21, 2020 Shaziba and 23 July, 2019 Shuicheng landslides in China, March 19, 2019 Takht landslide in Iran, June 15, 2018 Jalgyz-Jangak and May 25, 2018 Kugart landslides in Kyrgyzstan, July 7, 2018 Hitardalur landslide in Iceland, and January 25, 2019 Brumadinho landslide in Brazil. In comparison to commonly used neural networks like the LSTM algorithm, our proposed framework leads to a more accurate estimate for the time of landslide failure using time-series of SAR-derived parameters. Furthermore, our results suggest the great potential of SAR data to narrow the time period detected from optical data when used in conjunction with them.