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Journal ArticleDOI

Urban Land-Cover Change Detection through Sub-Pixel Imperviousness Mapping Using Remotely Sensed Data

TLDR
In this article, the authors developed a Sub-pixel Imperviousness Change Detection (SICD) approach to detect urban land-cover changes using Landsat and high-resolution imagery.
Abstract
We developed a Sub-pixel Imperviousness Change Detection (SICD) approach to detect urban land-cover changes using Landsat and high-resolution imagery. The sub-pixel percent imperviousness was mapped for two dates (09 March 1993 and 11 March 2001) over western Georgia using a regression tree algorithm. The accuracy of the predicted imperviousness was reasonable based on a comparison using independent reference data. The average absolute error between predicted and reference data was 16.4 percent for 1993 and 15.3 percent for 2001. The correlation coefficient (r) was 0.73 for 1993 and 0.78 for 2001, respectively. Areas with a significant increase (greater than 20 percent) in impervious surface from 1993 to 2001 were mostly related to known land-cover/land-use changes that occurred in this area, suggesting that the spatial change of an impervious surface is a useful indicator for identifying spatial extent, intensity, and, potentially, type of urban land-cover/land-use changes. Compared to other pixel-based change-detection methods (band differencing, rationing, change vector, post-classification), information on changes in sub-pixel percent imperviousness allow users to quantify and interpret urban land-cover/land-use changes based on their own definition. Such information is considered complementary to products generated using other change-detection methods. In addition, the procedure for mapping imperviousness is objective and repeatable, hence, can be used for monitoring urban land-cover/land-use change over a large geographic area. Potential applications and limitations of the products developed through this study in urban environmental studies are also discussed.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A comprehensive change detection method for updating the National Land Cover Database to circa 2011

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a new comprehensive change detection method (CCDM) designed as a key component for the development of NLCD 2011 and the research results from two exemplar studies, which integrates spectral-based change detection algorithms including a Multi-Index Integrated Change Analysis (MIICA) model and a novel change model called Zone, which extracts change information from two Landsat image pairs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Use of impervious surface in urban land-use classification

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored extraction of impervious surface information from Landsat Enhanced Thematic Mapper data based on the integration of fraction images from linear spectral mixture analysis and land surface temperature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatio-temporal dynamics and evolution of land use change and landscape pattern in response to rapid urbanization

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper explored the spatio-temporal dynamics and evolution of land use change and landscape pattern in response to the rapid urbanization process of a booming developing city in China from 1996 to 2006.
Journal ArticleDOI

PCA-based land-use change detection and analysis using multitemporal and multisensor satellite data

TL;DR: A new method using multitemporal and multisensor data (SPOT‐5 and Landsat data) to detect land‐use changes in an urban environment based on principal‐component analysis (PCA) and hybrid classification methods suggested that significant land‐ use changes have occurred in Hangzhou City from 2000 to 2003.
References
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Book

Introductory Digital Image Processing: A Remote Sensing Perspective

TL;DR: Introductory Digital Image Processing: A Remote Sensing Perspective focuses on digital image processing of aircraft- and satellite-derived, remotely sensed data for Earth resource management applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review Article Digital change detection techniques using remotely-sensed data

TL;DR: An evaluation of results indicates that various procedures of change detection produce different maps of change even in the same environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impervious surface coverage: the emergence of a key environmental indicator

TL;DR: A wide range of strategies to reduce impervious surfaces and their impacts on water resources can be applied to community planning, site-level planning and design, and land use regulation as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exploring a V-I-S (vegetation-impervious surface-soil) model for urban ecosystem analysis through remote sensing: comparative anatomy for cities

TL;DR: In this paper, a vegetation-impervious surface-soil (V-I-S) model is presented as a possible basis for standardization of urban environment parameters, which may serve as a foundation for characterizing urban/near-urban environments universally, and for comparison of urban morphology within and between cities.
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