scholarly journals Combined Multi-Layer Feature Fusion and Edge Detection Method for Distributed Photovoltaic Power Station Identification

Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (24) ◽  
pp. 6742
Author(s):  
Yongshi Jie ◽  
Xianhua Ji ◽  
Anzhi Yue ◽  
Jingbo Chen ◽  
Yupeng Deng ◽  
...  

Distributed photovoltaic power stations are an effective way to develop and utilize solar energy resources. Using high-resolution remote sensing images to obtain the locations, distribution, and areas of distributed photovoltaic power stations over a large region is important to energy companies, government departments, and investors. In this paper, a deep convolutional neural network was used to extract distributed photovoltaic power stations from high-resolution remote sensing images automatically, accurately, and efficiently. Based on a semantic segmentation model with an encoder-decoder structure, a gated fusion module was introduced to address the problem that small photovoltaic panels are difficult to identify. Further, to solve the problems of blurred edges in the segmentation results and that adjacent photovoltaic panels can easily be adhered, this work combines an edge detection network and a semantic segmentation network for multi-task learning to extract the boundaries of photovoltaic panels in a refined manner. Comparative experiments conducted on the Duke California Solar Array data set and a self-constructed Shanghai Distributed Photovoltaic Power Station data set show that, compared with SegNet, LinkNet, UNet, and FPN, the proposed method obtained the highest identification accuracy on both data sets, and its F1-scores reached 84.79% and 94.03%, respectively. These results indicate that effectively combining multi-layer features with a gated fusion module and introducing an edge detection network to refine the segmentation improves the accuracy of distributed photovoltaic power station identification.

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 2187
Author(s):  
Liegang Xia ◽  
Xiongbo Zhang ◽  
Junxia Zhang ◽  
Haiping Yang ◽  
Tingting Chen

The automated detection of buildings in remote sensing images enables understanding the distribution information of buildings, which is indispensable for many geographic and social applications, such as urban planning, change monitoring and population estimation. The performance of deep learning in images often depends on a large number of manually labeled samples, the production of which is time-consuming and expensive. Thus, this study focuses on reducing the number of labeled samples used and proposing a semi-supervised deep learning approach based on an edge detection network (SDLED), which is the first to introduce semi-supervised learning to the edge detection neural network for extracting building roof boundaries from high-resolution remote sensing images. This approach uses a small number of labeled samples and abundant unlabeled images for joint training. An expert-level semantic edge segmentation model is trained based on labeled samples, which guides unlabeled images to generate pseudo-labels automatically. The inaccurate label sets and manually labeled samples are used to update the semantic edge model together. Particularly, we modified the semantic segmentation network D-LinkNet to obtain high-quality pseudo-labels. Specifically, the main network architecture of D-LinkNet is retained while the multi-scale fusion is added in its second half to improve its performance on edge detection. The SDLED was tested on high-spatial-resolution remote sensing images taken from Google Earth. Results show that the SDLED performs better than the fully supervised method. Moreover, when the trained models were used to predict buildings in the neighboring counties, our approach was superior to the supervised way, with line IoU improvement of at least 6.47% and F1 score improvement of at least 7.49%.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 71
Author(s):  
Zhiyong Xu ◽  
Weicun Zhang ◽  
Tianxiang Zhang ◽  
Jiangyun Li

Semantic segmentation is a significant method in remote sensing image (RSIs) processing and has been widely used in various applications. Conventional convolutional neural network (CNN)-based semantic segmentation methods are likely to lose the spatial information in the feature extraction stage and usually pay little attention to global context information. Moreover, the imbalance of category scale and uncertain boundary information meanwhile exists in RSIs, which also brings a challenging problem to the semantic segmentation task. To overcome these problems, a high-resolution context extraction network (HRCNet) based on a high-resolution network (HRNet) is proposed in this paper. In this approach, the HRNet structure is adopted to keep the spatial information. Moreover, the light-weight dual attention (LDA) module is designed to obtain global context information in the feature extraction stage and the feature enhancement feature pyramid (FEFP) structure is promoted and employed to fuse the contextual information of different scales. In addition, to achieve the boundary information, we design the boundary aware (BA) module combined with the boundary aware loss (BAloss) function. The experimental results evaluated on Potsdam and Vaihingen datasets show that the proposed approach can significantly improve the boundary and segmentation performance up to 92.0% and 92.3% on overall accuracy scores, respectively. As a consequence, it is envisaged that the proposed HRCNet model will be an advantage in remote sensing images segmentation.


Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (10) ◽  
pp. 3232 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Liu ◽  
Qirui Ren ◽  
Jiahui Geng ◽  
Meng Ding ◽  
Jiangyun Li

Efficient and accurate semantic segmentation is the key technique for automatic remote sensing image analysis. While there have been many segmentation methods based on traditional hand-craft feature extractors, it is still challenging to process high-resolution and large-scale remote sensing images. In this work, a novel patch-wise semantic segmentation method with a new training strategy based on fully convolutional networks is presented to segment common land resources. First, to handle the high-resolution image, the images are split as local patches and then a patch-wise network is built. Second, training data is preprocessed in several ways to meet the specific characteristics of remote sensing images, i.e., color imbalance, object rotation variations and lens distortion. Third, a multi-scale training strategy is developed to solve the severe scale variation problem. In addition, the impact of conditional random field (CRF) is studied to improve the precision. The proposed method was evaluated on a dataset collected from a capital city in West China with the Gaofen-2 satellite. The dataset contains ten common land resources (Grassland, Road, etc.). The experimental results show that the proposed algorithm achieves 54.96% in terms of mean intersection over union (MIoU) and outperforms other state-of-the-art methods in remote sensing image segmentation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 1339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuo Liu ◽  
Wenrui Ding ◽  
Chunhui Liu ◽  
Yu Liu ◽  
Yufeng Wang ◽  
...  

The semantic segmentation of remote sensing images faces two major challenges: high inter-class similarity and interference from ubiquitous shadows. In order to address these issues, we develop a novel edge loss reinforced semantic segmentation network (ERN) that leverages the spatial boundary context to reduce the semantic ambiguity. The main contributions of this paper are as follows: (1) we propose a novel end-to-end semantic segmentation network for remote sensing, which involves multiple weighted edge supervisions to retain spatial boundary information; (2) the main representations of the network are shared between the edge loss reinforced structures and semantic segmentation, which means that the ERN simultaneously achieves semantic segmentation and edge detection without significantly increasing the model complexity; and (3) we explore and discuss different ERN schemes to guide the design of future networks. Extensive experimental results on two remote sensing datasets demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach both in quantitative and qualitative evaluation. Specifically, the semantic segmentation performance in shadow-affected regions is significantly improved.


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