DocumentCode :
3776909
Title :
Evaluating the effects of spatial resolution on land use and land cover classification accuracy
Author :
Varun Narayan Mishra;Rajendra Prasad;Pradeep Kumar;Dileep Kumar Gupta;Prabhat Kumar Singh Dikshit;Shyam Bihari Dwivedi;Anurag Ohri
Author_Institution :
Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) Varanasi, India
fYear :
2015
Firstpage :
208
Lastpage :
211
Abstract :
The choice of appropriate spatial resolution is a key factor to extract desired information from remotely sensed images. Optical data collected by two different sensors (LISS IV with 5.8 m and Landsat 8-OLI with 30 m spatial resolution respectively) were investigated against the capability to classify accurately into distinct land use and land cover (LULC) classes. To evaluate the quality of training samples class separability analysis using transformed divergence (TD) method was performed. Furthermore, supervised maximum likelihood classifier (MLC) was used to carry out LULC classification. The results indicated that the overall accuracy 83.28% and Kappa coefficient 0.805 for LISS IV image was found higher in comparison to Landsat 8-OLI image having overall accuracy 77.93% and Kappa coefficient 0.742 respectively.
Keywords :
"Remote sensing","Satellites","Earth","Vegetation mapping","Spatial resolution","Image classification","Optical imaging"
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Microwave, Optical and Communication Engineering (ICMOCE), 2015 International Conference on
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICMOCE.2015.7489727
Filename :
7489727
Link To Document :
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