The effect of atmospheric and topographic correction methods on land cover classification accuracy

被引:131
作者
Vanonckelen, Steven [1 ]
Lhermitte, Stefaan [2 ]
Van Rompaey, Anton [1 ]
机构
[1] Katholieke Univ Leuven, Div Geog, BE-3001 Heverlee, Belgium
[2] Royal Netherlands Meteorol Inst, NL-3730 AE De Bilt, Netherlands
来源
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF APPLIED EARTH OBSERVATION AND GEOINFORMATION | 2013年 / 24卷
关键词
Land cover mapping; Classification accuracy assessment; Atmospheric correction; Topographic correction; Landsat; Mountain areas; Bi-temporal; DIGITAL ELEVATION MODELS; REMOTELY-SENSED DATA; TM DATA; RADIOMETRIC CORRECTION; CORRECTION ALGORITHM; MINNAERT CORRECTION; SPATIAL-RESOLUTION; SATELLITE DATA; TIME-SERIES; NORMALIZATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.jag.2013.02.003
中图分类号
TP7 [遥感技术];
学科分类号
081102 ; 0816 ; 081602 ; 083002 ; 1404 ;
摘要
Mapping of vegetation in mountain areas based on remote sensing is obstructed by atmospheric and topographic distortions. A variety of atmospheric and topographic correction methods has been proposed to minimize atmospheric and topographic effects and should in principle lead to a better land cover classification. Only a limited number of atmospheric and topographic combinations has been tested and the effect on class accuracy and on different illumination conditions is not yet researched extensively. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of coupled correction methods on land cover classification accuracy. Therefore, all combinations of three atmospheric (no atmospheric correction, dark object subtraction and correction based on transmittance functions) and five topographic corrections (no topographic correction, band ratioing, cosine correction, pixel-based Minnaert and pixel-based C-correction) were applied on two acquisitions (2009 and 2010) of a Landsat image in the Romanian Carpathian mountains. The accuracies of the fifteen resulting land cover maps were evaluated statistically based on two validation sets: a random validation set and a validation subset containing pixels present in the difference area between the uncorrected classification and one of the fourteen corrected classifications. New insights into the differences in classification accuracy were obtained. First, results showed that all corrected images resulted in higher overall classification accuracies than the uncorrected images. The highest accuracy for the full validation set was achieved after combination of an atmospheric correction based on transmittance functions and a pixel-based Minnaert topographic correction. Secondly, class accuracies of especially the coniferous and mixed forest classes were enhanced after correction. There was only a minor improvement for the other land cover classes (broadleaved forest, bare soil, grass and water). This was explained by the position of different land cover types in the landscape. Finally, coupled correction methods showed most efficient on weakly illuminated slopes. After correction, accuracies in the low illumination zone (cos beta <= 0.65) were improved more than in the moderate and high illumination zones. Considering all results, best overall classification results were achieved after combination of the transmittance function correction with pixel-based Minnaert or pixel-based C-topographic correction. Furthermore, results of this bi-temporal study indicated that the topographic component had a higher influence on classification accuracy than the atmospheric component and that it is worthwhile to invest in both atmospheric and topographic corrections in a multi-temporal study. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:9 / 21
页数:13
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