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Monitoring the summer flooding in the Poyang Lake area of China in 2020 based on Sentinel-1 data and multiple convolutional neural networks

Zhen Dong, Guojie Wang, Solomon Obiri Yeboah Amankwah, Xikun Wei, Yifan Hu, Aiqing Feng

2021International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation103 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Precise monitoring of floods is significant in disaster management and loss reduction; however, remote sensing data resource and methods can largely affect the monitoring accuracy of flooded areas. In this study, we use cloud-free Sentinel-1 Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery, preferable to the optical imagery. We have used 5 convolutional neural networks (CNNs), including HRNet, DenseNet, SegNet, ResNet and DeepLab v3 + for flood monitoring in the Poyang Lake area, and compared their performances with the traditional methods — the bimodal threshold segmentation (BTS) and the OSTU method. The HRNet has superior performance in water body identification with the highest precision and efficiency, based on a parallel structure to not only extract rich semantic information but also maintain high-resolution features in the whole process. Besides, speckle noise reduction by deep convolutional neural networks in SAR imagery is better compared with the Refined Lee filter. The CNNs are then used to monitor the temporal evolution of summer flooding (May-Nov.) in 2020. Results show the smallest water coverage of Poyang Lake in late May; it gradually increases to the maximum in mid-July, and then shows a downward trend until November.

Topics & Concepts

Convolutional neural networkSynthetic aperture radarRemote sensingFlood mythComputer scienceFlooding (psychology)SegmentationEnvironmental scienceArtificial intelligenceGeographyPsychotherapistPsychologyArchaeologyFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementHydrology and Watershed Management StudiesTropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research
Monitoring the summer flooding in the Poyang Lake area of China in 2020 based on Sentinel-1 data and multiple convolutional neural networks | Litcius