Title :
The utility of the co-occurrence matrix to extract slum areas from VHR imagery
Author :
Kuffer, Monika ; Sliuzas, Richard ; Pfeffer, Karin ; Baud, Isa
Author_Institution :
Dept. Urban & Regional Planning & Geo-Inf. Manage., Univ. of Twente, Enschede, Netherlands
fDate :
March 30 2015-April 1 2015
Abstract :
Many cities in developing countries lack detailed information on the emergence and growth of highly dynamic slum developments. Available statistical data are often aggregated to large administrative units that are heterogeneous and geographically rather meaningless in terms of pro-poor policy development. Such general base information neither allows a spatially disaggregated analysis of deprivations nor are settlement dynamics easily monitored, while slums are rapidly developing in particular in megacities. This paper explores the utility of the co-occurrence matrix (GLCM) and NDVI to distinguish between slums and formal built-up areas in very high spatial and spectral resolution satellite imagery (i.e., 8-Band images of WorldView-2). For this study, an East-West cross-section of Mumbai in India was used. We employed image segmentation to extract homogenous urban patches (HUPs) for which the information extracted from the GLCM was aggregated. The result was evaluated using collected ground-truth information and visual image interpretation. The results showed that the variance of the GLCM combined with the NDVI separate formal built-up and slum areas very well (overall accuracy of 86.7%).
Keywords :
feature extraction; geophysical image processing; image resolution; image segmentation; image texture; remote sensing; statistical analysis; GLCM; NDVI; VHR imagery; co-occurrence matrix; dynamic slum development; homogenous urban patch extraction; image segmentation; information extraction; settlement dynamics; slum area extraction; spatial resolution satellite imagery; spatially disaggregated analysis; spectral resolution satellite imagery; statistical data; visual image interpretation; Buildings; Cities and towns; Data mining; Image segmentation; Remote sensing; Roads; Vegetation mapping; Mumbai; homogenous urban patches; image segmentation; slums; texture;
Conference_Titel :
Urban Remote Sensing Event (JURSE), 2015 Joint
Conference_Location :
Lausanne
DOI :
10.1109/JURSE.2015.7120514