Frontiers in Remote Sensing (Dec 2023)

Research on water extraction from high resolution remote sensing images based on deep learning

  • Peng Wu,
  • Junjie Fu,
  • Xiaomei Yi,
  • Xiaomei Yi,
  • Guoying Wang,
  • Lufeng Mo,
  • Brian Tapiwanashe Maponde,
  • Hao Liang,
  • Chunling Tao,
  • WenYing Ge,
  • TengTeng Jiang,
  • Zhen Ren

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/frsen.2023.1283615
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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Introduction: Monitoring surface water through the extraction of water bodies from high-resolution remote sensing images is of significant importance. With the advancements in deep learning, deep neural networks have been increasingly applied to high-resolution remote sensing image segmentation. However, conventional convolutional models face challenges in water body extraction, including issues like unclear water boundaries and a high number of training parameters.Methods: In this study, we employed the DeeplabV3+ network for water body extraction in high-resolution remote sensing images. However, the traditional DeeplabV3+ network exhibited limitations in segmentation accuracy for high-resolution remote sensing images and incurred high training costs due to a large number of parameters. To address these issues, we made several improvements to the traditional DeeplabV3+ network: Replaced the backbone network with MobileNetV2. Added a Channel Attention (CA) module to the MobileNetV2 feature extraction network. Introduced an Atrous Spatial Pyramid Pooling (ASPP) module. Implemented Focal loss for balanced loss computation.Results: Our proposed method yielded significant enhancements. It not only improved the segmentation accuracy of water bodies in high-resolution remote sensing images but also effectively reduced the number of network parameters and training time. Experimental results on the Water dataset demonstrated superior performance compared to other networks: Outperformed the U-Net network by 3.06% in terms of mean Intersection over Union (mIoU). Outperformed the MACU-Net network by 1.03%. Outperformed the traditional DeeplabV3+ network by 2.05%. The proposed method surpassed not only the traditional DeeplabV3+ but also U-Net, PSP-Net, and MACU-Net networks.Discussion: These results highlight the effectiveness of our modified DeeplabV3+ network with MobileNetV2 backbone, CA module, ASPP module, and Focal loss for water body extraction in high-resolution remote sensing images. The reduction in training time and parameters makes our approach a promising solution for accurate and efficient water body segmentation in remote sensing applications.

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