IEEE Access (Jan 2020)
Rapid Identification of Post-Earthquake Collapsed Buildings via Multi-Scale Morphological Profiles With Multi-Structuring Elements
Abstract
Rapid identification of post-earthquake collapsed buildings can be conducive to capturing an immediate disaster assessment, which can help design effective emergency response strategies. At present, earthquake disaster assessment in practice mainly relies on time-consuming artificial field investigations, which cannot adapt to the demands of a timely rescue. However, morphological methods have proved to be of great potential in describing the disaster characteristics of building as for size, shape, directionality and contrast. Conventionally, boundaries of intact building appear flat and smooth, thus it can be reasonably depicted by linear structural element, while collapsed buildings generally emerge dispersedly distributed without regular geometry which can be suitably described by disk structural element. Based on these intuitive findings, we propose an approach for extracting intact and collapsed buildings via multi-scale morphological profiles with multi-structuring elements from post-earthquake satellite imagery. This approach consists of three core components: 1) Linear and disk structuring elements are established through top-hat reconstruction for extracting the initial intact and collapsed building, respectively. 2) Purified intact and collapsed buildings can be obtained by a straightforward threshold segmentation and further post processing, such as area, normalized green plant index (NGPI) and the length-width ratio for image noise suppression. 3) Boolean set operations are adopted to distinguish the intact and collapsed buildings. Experiments demonstrate that the proposed method has achieved satisfactory results and exerted great superiority in computational efficiency.
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