Title
Examining the Roles of Spectral, Spatial, and Topographic Features in Improving Land-Cover and Forest Classifications in a Subtropical Region.
Abstract
Many studies have investigated the effects of spectral and spatial features of remotely sensed data and topographic characteristics on land-cover and forest classification results, but they are mainly based on individual sensor data. How these features from different kinds of remotely sensed data with various spatial resolutions influence classification results is unclear. We conducted a comprehensively comparative analysis of spectral and spatial features from ZiYuan-3 (ZY-3), Sentinel-2, and Landsat and their fused datasets with spatial resolution ranges from 2 m, 6 m, 10 m, 15 m, and to 30 m, and topographic factors in influencing land-cover classification results in a subtropical forest ecosystem using random forest approach. The results indicated that the combined spectral (fused data based on ZY-3 and Sentinel-2), spatial, and topographical data with 2-m spatial resolution provided the highest overall classification accuracy of 83.5% for 11 land-cover classes, as well as the highest accuracies for almost all individual classes. The improvement of spectral bands from 4 to 10 through fusion of ZY-3 and Sentinel-2 data increased overall accuracy by 14.2% at 2-m spatial resolution, and by 11.1% at 6-m spatial resolution. Textures from high spatial resolution imagery play more important roles than textures from medium spatial resolution images. The incorporation of textural images into spectral data in the 2-m spatial resolution imagery improved overall accuracy by 6.0-7.7% compared to 1.1-1.7% in the 10-m to 30-m spatial resolution images. Incorporation of topographic factors into spectral and textural imagery further improved overall accuracy by 1.2-5.5%. The classification accuracies for coniferous forest, eucalyptus, other broadleaf forests, and bamboo forest can be 85.3-91.1%. This research provides new insights for using proper combinations of spectral bands and textures corresponding to specifically spatial resolution images in improving land-cover and forest classifications in subtropical regions.
Year
DOI
Venue
2020
10.3390/rs12182907
REMOTE SENSING
Keywords
DocType
Volume
land-cover classification,subtropical ecosystem,random forest,multiple data sources,data fusion
Journal
12
Issue
Citations 
PageRank 
18
0
0.34
References 
Authors
0
7
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Xiaozhi Yu100.34
Dengsheng Lu214123.73
Xiandie Jiang300.34
Guiying Li4567.48
Yaoliang Chen500.34
Dengqiu Li6142.48
Erxue Chen73617.10