Atlas of urban and regional change, greater Pittsburgh region, Pennsylvania; A. Land use (Level II), 1973

1976 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keyword(s):  
Land Use ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (7) ◽  
pp. 1058 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ying Tu ◽  
Bin Chen ◽  
Tao Zhang ◽  
Bing Xu

Understanding distributions of urban land use is of great importance for urban planning, decision support, and resource allocation. The first mapping results of essential urban land use categories (EULUC) in China for 2018 have been recently released. However, such kind of national maps may not sufficiently meet the growing demand for regional analysis. To address this shortcoming, here we proposed a segmentation-based framework named EULUC-seg to improve the mapping results of EULUC at the city scale. An object-based segmentation approach was first applied to generate the basic mapping units within urban parcels. Multiple features derived from high-resolution remotely sensed and social sensing data were updated and then recalculated within each unit. Random forest was adopted as the machine learning algorithm for classifying urban land use into five Level I classes and twelve Level II classes. Finally, an accuracy assessment was carried out based on a collection of manually interpreted samples. Results showed that our derived map achieved an overall accuracy of 87.58% for Level I, and 73.53% for Level II. The accurate and refined map of EULUC-seg is expected to better support various applications in the future.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (15) ◽  
pp. 2386 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing Sun ◽  
Hong Wang ◽  
Zhenglin Song ◽  
Jinbo Lu ◽  
Pengyu Meng ◽  
...  

High-spatial-resolution (HSR) urban land use maps are very important for urban planning, traffic management, and environmental monitoring. The rapid urbanization in China has led to dramatic urban land use changes, however, so far, there are no such HSR urban land use maps based on unified classification frameworks. To fill this gap, the mapping of 2018 essential urban land use categories in China (EULUC-China) was jointly accomplished by a group of universities and research institutes. However, the relatively lower classification accuracy may not sufficiently meet the application demands for specific cities. Addressing these challenges, this study took Nanjing city as the case study to further improve the mapping practice of essential urban land use categories, by refining the generation of urban parcels, resolving the problem of unbalanced distribution of point of interest (POI) data, integrating the spatial dependency of POI data, and evaluating the size of training samples on the classification accuracy. The results revealed that (1) the POI features played the most important roles in classification performance, especially in identifying administrative, medical, sport, and cultural land use categories, (2) compared with the EULUC-China, the overall accuracy for Level I and Level II in EULUC-Nanjing has increased by 11.1% and 5%, to 86.1% and 80% respectively, and (3) the classification accuracy of Level I and Level II would be stable when the number of training samples was up to 350. The methods and findings in this study are expected to better inform the regional to continental mappings of urban land uses.


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