Sensor agnostic semantic segmentation of structurally diverse and complex forest point clouds using deep learning

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Krisanski, Sean ORCID: 0000-0003-0689-0051, Taskhiri, Mohammad Sadegh ORCID: 0000-0002-9871-361X, Aracil, Susana Gonzalez, Herries, David and Turner, Paul ORCID: 0000-0003-4504-2338 (2021) Sensor agnostic semantic segmentation of structurally diverse and complex forest point clouds using deep learning. Remote Sensing, 13 (8). ISSN 2072-4292

Abstract

Forest inventories play an important role in enabling informed decisions to be made for the management and conservation of forest resources; however, the process of collecting inventory information is laborious. Despite advancements in mapping technologies allowing forests to be digitized in finer granularity than ever before, it is still common for forest measurements to be collected using simple tools such as calipers, measuring tapes, and hypsometers. Dense understory vegetation and complex forest structures can present substantial challenges to point cloud processing tools, often leading to erroneous measurements, and making them of less utility in complex forests. To address this challenge, this research demonstrates an effective deep learning approach for seman-tically segmenting high-resolution forest point clouds from multiple different sensing systems in diverse forest conditions. Seven diverse point cloud datasets were manually segmented to train and evaluate this model, resulting in per-class segmentation accuracies of Terrain: 95.92%, Vegetation: 96.02%, Coarse Woody Debris: 54.98%, and Stem: 96.09%. By exploiting the segmented point cloud, we also present a method of extracting a Digital Terrain Model (DTM) from such segmented point clouds. This approach was applied to a set of six point clouds that were made publicly available as part of a benchmarking study to evaluate the DTM performance. The mean DTM error was 0.04 m relative to the reference with 99.9% completeness. These approaches serve as useful steps toward a fully automated and reliable measurement extraction tool, agnostic to the sensing technology used or the complexity of the forest, provided that the point cloud has sufficient coverage and accuracy. Ongoing work will see these models incorporated into a fully automated forest measurement tool for the extraction of structural metrics for applications in forestry, conservation, and research.

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Item type Article
URI https://vuir.vu.edu.au/id/eprint/45104
DOI 10.3390/rs13081413
Official URL https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/13/8/1413
Subjects Current > FOR (2020) Classification > 3007 Forestry sciences
Current > FOR (2020) Classification > 4013 Geomatic engineering
Current > FOR (2020) Classification > 4609 Information systems
Current > Division/Research > Institute for Sustainable Industries and Liveable Cities
Keywords remote sensing, forestry, forest structures, mapping technology, cloud processing
Citations in Scopus 19 - View on Scopus
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