Published September 24, 2019 | Version v1
Conference paper Open

Knowledge Extracted from Copernicus Satellite Data

  • 1. German Aerospace Center
  • 2. The Arctic University of Norway
  • 3. Norwegian Meteorological Institute
  • 4. Polar View Earth Observation Ltd
  • 5. British Antarctic Survey
  • 6. National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

Description

ExtremeEarth is a European H2020 project; it aims at developing analytics techniques and technologies that combine Copernicus satellite data with information and knowledge extraction, and exploiting them on ESA’s Food Security and Polar Thematic Exploitation Platforms. In this publication, we focus on the Polar case which requires the selection of validation areas, the generation of a training dataset, the development and testing of deep learning algorithms, and the demonstration of regional results. During the development of deep learning algorithms, a key activity is to establish a large amount of referenced Earth Observation data. They need to be sufficiently diverse to cover the major target areas of satellite images under varying imaging conditions and across all seasons. For doing this, we propose to select overlapping target areas from Synthetic Aperture Radar and multispectral images acquired with rapid succession. Such a combination approach already demonstrated its applicability for monitoring seasonal snow cover [1]. By applying an already established active learning approach based on a Support Vector Machine with relevance feedback [2], we can limit ourselves to a limited number of typical satellite images to extract their information content, and to generate semantic annotations for them. This approach is also a simple way to generate benchmarking datasets that can be used for testing and validating different algorithms, and for creating additional bigger datasets for large-scale demonstrations. The proposed methodology uses new paradigms from Recurrent Neural Networks and Generative Adversarial Networks, supported by Bayesian and Information Bottleneck concepts.

References

1. Monitoring sesonal snow cover. Available: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8518203.

2. EOLib project. Available: http://wiki.services.eoportal.org/tiki-index.php?page=EOLIB+Project.

 

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Additional details

Funding

ExtremeEarth – From Copernicus Big Data to Extreme Earth Analytics 825258
European Commission