Title :
Dammaged building identifying from VHR satellite imagery using morphological operators in 2011 Pacific coast of Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami
Author :
Parape, Chandana Dinesh Kumara ; Premachandra, H. Chinthaka N ; Tamura, Masayuki ; Sugiura, Masami
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Urban & Environ. Eng., Kyoto Univ., Kyoto, Japan
Abstract :
The 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake occurred 130km off the northeast coast of Japan in the Pacific Ocean near the Japan Trench and it triggered huge Tsunami, which caused damaged along 600km of coastline. Estimation of tsunami impact on buildings from this event is important for quick response for evaluation and the reconstruction process. This study presents a methodology for an automated damaged buildings detection algorithm using an object recognition task based on Differential Morphological Profile for Very High Resolution (VHR) remotely sensed satellite images. The proposed approach involves morphological operators among which adaptive varying specific sizes, shape and gray level of the structuring elements. GeoEye-1 and IKONOS satellite images consisting of a pre and post 2011 Pacific coast Tohoku earthquake and tsunami site of the Ishinomaki area in Miyagi Prefecture, Japan were used. Morphological operations of opening and closing with construction were applied for segmented images. The Random Forest classification method was used for the building extraction and the results comparison with ground truth data.
Keywords :
decision trees; earthquakes; geophysical image processing; image classification; remote sensing; tsunami; AD 2011; GeoEye-1 satellite images; Great East Japan Earthquake; IKONOS satellite images; Japan Trench; Pacific Ocean; Tohoku earthquake; Tohoku tsunami; VHR remotely sensed satellite images; automated damaged building detection algorithm; damaged building identification; differential morphological profile; morphological operators; random forest classification method; structuring element gray level; structuring element shape; structuring element size; tsunami impact estimation; very high resolution satellite imagery; Buildings; Earthquakes; Feature extraction; Remote sensing; Satellites; Tsunami; Vectors; Building Extraction; Differential Morphological Profile; GeoEye-1; IKONOS; Random Forest; Tsunami;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS), 2012 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Munich
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1160-1
Electronic_ISBN :
2153-6996
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.2012.6350793