Evaluation of aerial remote sensing techniques for vegetation management in power line corridors


Autoria(s): Mills, Steven; Gerardo, Marcos; Li, Zhengrong; Cai, Jinhai; Hayward, Ross F.; Mejias, Luis; Walker, Rodney A.
Data(s)

07/10/2010

Resumo

The following paper presents an evaluation of airborne sensors for use in vegetation management in powerline corridors. Three integral stages in the management process are addressed including, the detection of trees, relative positioning with respect to the nearest powerline and vegetation height estimation. Image data, including multi-spectral and high resolution, are analyzed along with LiDAR data captured from fixed wing aircraft. Ground truth data is then used to establish the accuracy and reliability of each sensor thus providing a quantitative comparison of sensor options. Tree detection was achieved through crown delineation using a Pulse-Coupled Neural Network (PCNN) and morphologic reconstruction applied to multi-spectral imagery. Through testing it was shown to achieve a detection rate of 96%, while the accuracy in segmenting groups of trees and single trees correctly was shown to be 75%. Relative positioning using LiDAR achieved a RMSE of 1.4m and 2.1m for cross track distance and along track position respectively, while Direct Georeferencing achieved RMSE of 3.1m in both instances. The estimation of pole and tree heights measured with LiDAR had a RMSE of 0.4m and 0.9m respectively, while Stereo Matching achieved 1.5m and 2.9m. Overall a small number of poles were missed with detection rates of 98% and 95% for LiDAR and Stereo Matching.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/31474/

Publicador

IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers)

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/31474/1/c31474.pdf

DOI:10.1109/TGRS.2010.2046905

Mills, Steven, Gerardo, Marcos, Li, Zhengrong, Cai, Jinhai, Hayward, Ross F., Mejias, Luis, & Walker, Rodney A. (2010) Evaluation of aerial remote sensing techniques for vegetation management in power line corridors. IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, 48(9), pp. 3379-3390.

Direitos

Copyright 2010 IEEE

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Fonte

Australian Research Centre for Aerospace Automation; Computer Science; Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering; Faculty of Science and Technology; School of Engineering Systems

Palavras-Chave #090905 Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing #Vegetation Mapping #Power Transmission Lines #Stereo Vision #Laser Measurement Applications #Image Segmentation
Tipo

Journal Article