Remote sensing tree classification with a multilayer perceptron

Department of Biology, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT, United States
DOI
10.7287/peerj.preprints.26971v1
Subject Areas
Ecology, Data Mining and Machine Learning, Data Science, Forestry, Spatial and Geographic Information Science
Keywords
airborne remote sensing, data alignment, species classification, crown segmentation, national ecological observatory network, crown delineation, remote sensing, data science competition, multilayer perceptron
Copyright
© 2018 Sumsion et al.
Licence
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ Preprints) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
Cite this article
Sumsion GR, Bradshaw MS, Hill KT, Pinto LDG, Piccolo SR, BYU Bioinformatics Research Group (BRG). 2018. Remote sensing tree classification with a multilayer perceptron. PeerJ Preprints 6:e26971v1

Abstract

To accelerate scientific progress on remote tree classification—as well as biodiversity and ecology sampling—The National Institute of Science and Technology created a community-based competition where scientists were invited to contribute informatics methods for classifying tree species and genus using crown-level images of trees. We predicted tree species and genus at the pixel level using hyperspectral and LIDAR observations. We compared three algorithms that have been implemented extensively across a broad range of research applications: support vector machines, random forests, and multilayer perceptron. At the pixel level, the multilayer perceptron algorithm predicted species or genus with high accuracy (92.7 and 95.9%, respectively) on the training data and performed better than the other algorithms (85.8-93.5%). This indicates promise for the use of the MLP algorithm for tree-species classification and coincides with a growing body of research in which neural network-based algorithms outperform other types of classification algorithms for machine vision. To aggregate patterns across the images, we used an ensemble approach that averages the pixel-level outputs of the MLP algorithm to predict species at the crown level. The accuracy of these predictions on the test set was 68.8% for species.

Author Comment

This is a submission to PeerJ for review.