11,239 research outputs found
Evaluating the Differences of Gridding Techniques for Digital Elevation Models Generation and Their Influence on the Modeling of Stony Debris Flows Routing: A Case Study From Rovina di Cancia Basin (North-Eastern Italian Alps)
Debris \ufb02ows are among the most hazardous phenomena in mountain areas. To cope
with debris \ufb02ow hazard, it is common to delineate the risk-prone areas through
routing models. The most important input to debris \ufb02ow routing models are the
topographic data, usually in the form of Digital Elevation Models (DEMs). The quality
of DEMs depends on the accuracy, density, and spatial distribution of the sampled
points; on the characteristics of the surface; and on the applied gridding methodology.
Therefore, the choice of the interpolation method affects the realistic representation
of the channel and fan morphology, and thus potentially the debris \ufb02ow routing
modeling outcomes. In this paper, we initially investigate the performance of common
interpolation methods (i.e., linear triangulation, natural neighbor, nearest neighbor,
Inverse Distance to a Power, ANUDEM, Radial Basis Functions, and ordinary kriging)
in building DEMs with the complex topography of a debris \ufb02ow channel located
in the Venetian Dolomites (North-eastern Italian Alps), by using small footprint full-
waveform Light Detection And Ranging (LiDAR) data. The investigation is carried
out through a combination of statistical analysis of vertical accuracy, algorithm
robustness, and spatial clustering of vertical errors, and multi-criteria shape reliability
assessment. After that, we examine the in\ufb02uence of the tested interpolation algorithms
on the performance of a Geographic Information System (GIS)-based cell model for
simulating stony debris \ufb02ows routing. In detail, we investigate both the correlation
between the DEMs heights uncertainty resulting from the gridding procedure and
that on the corresponding simulated erosion/deposition depths, both the effect of
interpolation algorithms on simulated areas, erosion and deposition volumes, solid-liquid
discharges, and channel morphology after the event. The comparison among the tested
interpolation methods highlights that the ANUDEM and ordinary kriging algorithms
are not suitable for building DEMs with complex topography. Conversely, the linear
triangulation, the natural neighbor algorithm, and the thin-plate spline plus tension and completely regularized spline functions ensure the best trade-off among accuracy
and shape reliability. Anyway, the evaluation of the effects of gridding techniques on
debris \ufb02ow routing modeling reveals that the choice of the interpolation algorithm does
not signi\ufb01cantly affect the model outcomes
Sparse optical flow regularisation for real-time visual tracking
Optical flow can greatly improve the robustness of visual tracking algorithms. While dense optical flow algorithms have various applications, they can not be used for real-time solutions without resorting to GPU calculations. Furthermore, most optical flow algorithms fail in challenging lighting environments due to the violation of the brightness constraint. We propose a simple but effective iterative regularisation scheme for real-time, sparse optical flow algorithms, that is shown to be robust to sudden illumination changes and can handle large displacements. The algorithm proves to outperform well known techniques in real life video sequences, while being much faster to calculate. Our solution increases the robustness of a real-time particle filter based tracking application, consuming only a fraction of the available CPU power. Furthermore, a new and realistic optical flow dataset with annotated ground truth is created and made freely available for research purposes
A Joint Intensity and Depth Co-Sparse Analysis Model for Depth Map Super-Resolution
High-resolution depth maps can be inferred from low-resolution depth
measurements and an additional high-resolution intensity image of the same
scene. To that end, we introduce a bimodal co-sparse analysis model, which is
able to capture the interdependency of registered intensity and depth
information. This model is based on the assumption that the co-supports of
corresponding bimodal image structures are aligned when computed by a suitable
pair of analysis operators. No analytic form of such operators exist and we
propose a method for learning them from a set of registered training signals.
This learning process is done offline and returns a bimodal analysis operator
that is universally applicable to natural scenes. We use this to exploit the
bimodal co-sparse analysis model as a prior for solving inverse problems, which
leads to an efficient algorithm for depth map super-resolution.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Tile2Vec: Unsupervised representation learning for spatially distributed data
Geospatial analysis lacks methods like the word vector representations and
pre-trained networks that significantly boost performance across a wide range
of natural language and computer vision tasks. To fill this gap, we introduce
Tile2Vec, an unsupervised representation learning algorithm that extends the
distributional hypothesis from natural language -- words appearing in similar
contexts tend to have similar meanings -- to spatially distributed data. We
demonstrate empirically that Tile2Vec learns semantically meaningful
representations on three datasets. Our learned representations significantly
improve performance in downstream classification tasks and, similar to word
vectors, visual analogies can be obtained via simple arithmetic in the latent
space.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures in main text; 9 pages, 11 figures in appendi
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