Litcius/Paper detail

Meta-Learning for Few-Shot Land Cover Classification

Marc Ruswurm, Sherrie Wang, Marco Körner, David B. Lobell

202090 citationsDOI

Abstract

The representations of the Earth's surface vary from one geographic region to another. For instance, the appearance of urban areas differs between continents, and seasonality influences the appearance of vegetation. To capture the diversity within a single category, such as urban or vegetation, requires a large model capacity and, consequently, large datasets. In this work, we propose a different perspective and view this diversity as an inductive transfer learning problem where few data samples from one region allow a model to adapt to an unseen region. We evaluate the modelagnostic meta-learning (MAML) algorithm on classification and segmentation tasks using globally and regionally distributed datasets. We find that few-shot model adaptation outperforms pre-training with regular gradient descent and fine-tuning on the (1) Sen12MS dataset and (2) DeepGlobe dataset when the source domain and target domain differ. This indicates that model optimization with meta-learning may benefit tasks in the Earth sciences whose data show a high degree of diversity from region to region, while traditional gradient-based supervised learning remains suitable in the absence of a feature or label shift.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceArtificial intelligenceLand coverMeta learning (computer science)Gradient descentMachine learningTransfer of learningDomain (mathematical analysis)Feature (linguistics)SegmentationDiversity (politics)Vegetation (pathology)Pattern recognition (psychology)Land useMathematicsEcologyArtificial neural networkTask (project management)PathologyMathematical analysisPhilosophyEconomicsManagementLinguisticsAnthropologySociologyBiologyMedicineDomain Adaptation and Few-Shot LearningCryospheric studies and observationsClimate change and permafrost