Paper detail

Geometry-Aware Segmentation of Remote Sensing Images via Implicit Height Estimation

Recent studies have shown the benefits of using additional elevation data (e.g., DSM) for enhancing the performance of the semantic segmentation of aerial images. However, previous methods mostly adopt 3D elevation information as additional inputs. While in many real-world applications, one does not have the corresponding DSM information at hand and the spatial resolution of acquired DSM images usually do not match the aerial images. To alleviate this data constraint and also take advantage of 3D elevation information, in this paper, we introduce a geometry-aware segmentation model that achieves accurate semantic labeling of aerial images via joint height estimation. Instead of using a single-stream encoder-decoder network for semantic labeling, we design a separate decoder branch to predict the height map and use the DSM images as side supervision to train this newly designed decoder branch. In this way, our model does not require DSM as model input and still benefits from the helpful 3D geometric information during training. Moreover, we develop a new geometry-aware convolution module that fuses the 3D geometric features from the height decoder branch and the 2D contextual features from the semantic segmentation branch. The fused feature embeddings can produce geometry-aware segmentation maps with enhanced performance. Our model is trained with DSM images as side supervision, while in the inference stage, it does not require DSM data and directly predicts the semantic labels in an end-to-end fashion. Experiments on ISPRS Vaihingen and Potsdam datasets demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method for the semantic segmentation of aerial images. The proposed model achieves remarkable performance on both datasets without using any hand-crafted features or post-processing.

preprint2020arXivOpen access
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