JOURNAL ARTICLE

Shadow detection using object area-based and morphological filtering for very high-resolution satellite imagery of urban areas

Abstract

The presence of shadows in remote sensing images leads to misinterpretation of objects and a wrong discrimination of the targets of interest, therefore, limiting the use of several imaging applications. An automatic area-based approach for shadow detection is proposed, which combines spatial and spectral features into a unified and flexible approach. Potential shadow-pixels candidates are identified using morphological-based operators, in particular, black-top-hat transformations as well as area injunction strategies as computed by the well-established normalized saturation-value difference index. The obtained output is a shadow mask, refined in the last step of our method in order to reduce misclassified pixels. Experiments over a large dataset formed by more than 200 scenes of very high-resolution images covering the metropolitan urban area of São Paulo city are performed, where the images are collected from the WorldView-2 (WV-2) and Pléiades-1B (PL-1B) sensors. As verified by an extensive battery of tests, the proposed method provides a good level of discrimination between shadow and nonshadow pixels, with an overall accuracy up to 94.2%, for WV-2, and 90.84%, for PL-1B. Comparative results also attested that the designed approach is very competitive against representative state-of-the-art methods and it can be used for further shadow removal-dependent applications.

Keywords:
Shadow (psychology) Pixel Computer science Artificial intelligence Computer vision Remote sensing Image resolution Satellite imagery Object detection Satellite Pattern recognition (psychology) Geology Physics

Metrics

11
Cited By
1.33
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
40
Refs
0.83
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Remote-Sensing Image Classification
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Media Technology
Video Surveillance and Tracking Methods
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Automated Road and Building Extraction
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Ocean Engineering
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