![]() Nurunnabi, Abdul Awal Md ![]() ![]() in Robust Approach for Urban Road Surface Extraction Using Mobile Laser Scanning Data (2022, June) Road surface extraction is crucial for 3D city analysis. Mobile laser scanning (MLS) is the most appropriate data acquisition system for the road environment because of its efficient vehicle-based on-road ... [more ▼] Road surface extraction is crucial for 3D city analysis. Mobile laser scanning (MLS) is the most appropriate data acquisition system for the road environment because of its efficient vehicle-based on-road scanning opportunity. Many methods are available for road pavement, curb and roadside way extraction. Most of them use classical approaches that do not mitigate problems caused by the presence of noise and outliers. In practice, however, laser scanning point clouds are not free from noise and outliers, and it is apparent that the presence of a very small portion of outliers and noise can produce unreliable and non-robust results. A road surface usually consists of three key parts: road pavement, curb and roadside way. This paper investigates the problem of road surface extraction in the presence of noise and outliers, and proposes a robust algorithm for road pavement, curb, road divider/islands, and roadside way extraction using MLS point clouds. The proposed algorithm employs robust statistical approaches to remove the consequences of the presence of noise and outliers. It consists of five sequential steps for road ground and non-ground surface separation, and road related components determination. Demonstration on two different MLS data sets shows that the new algorithm is efficient for road surface extraction and for classifying road pavement, curb, road divider/island and roadside way. The success can be rated in one experiment in this paper, where we extract curb points; the results achieve 97.28%, 100% and 0.986 of precision, recall and Matthews correlation coefficient, respectively. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 26 (1 UL)![]() Nurunnabi, Abdul Awal Md ![]() ![]() E-print/Working paper (2022) Precise ground surface topography is crucial for 3D city analysis, digital terrain modeling, natural disaster monitoring, high-density map generation, and autonomous navigation to name a few. Deep ... [more ▼] Precise ground surface topography is crucial for 3D city analysis, digital terrain modeling, natural disaster monitoring, high-density map generation, and autonomous navigation to name a few. Deep learning (DL; LeCun, et al., 2015), a division of machine learning (ML), has been achieving unparalleled success in image processing, and recently demonstrated a huge potential for point cloud analysis. This article presents a feature-based DL algorithm that classifies ground and non-ground points in aerial laser scanning point clouds. Recent advancements of remote sensing technologies make it possible digitizing the real world in a near automated fashion. LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) based point clouds that are a type of remotely sensed georeferenced data, providing detailed 3D information on objects and environment have been recognized as one of the most powerful means of digitization. Unlike imagery, point clouds are unstructured, sparse and of irregular data format which creates many challenges, but also provides huge opportunities for capturing geometric details of scanned surfaces with millimeter accuracy. Classifying and separating non-ground points from ground points largely reduce data volumes for consecutive analyses of either ground or non-ground surfaces, which consequently saves cost and labor, and simplifies further analysis. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 67 (2 UL)![]() Nurunnabi, Abdul Awal Md ![]() ![]() in A TWO-STEP FEATURE EXTRACTION ALGORITHM: APPLICATION TO DEEP LEARNING FOR POINT CLOUD CLASSIFICATION (2022, March) Most deep learning (DL) methods that are not end-to-end use several multi-scale and multi-type hand-crafted features that make the network challenging, more computationally intensive and vulnerable to ... [more ▼] Most deep learning (DL) methods that are not end-to-end use several multi-scale and multi-type hand-crafted features that make the network challenging, more computationally intensive and vulnerable to overfitting. Furthermore, reliance on empirically-based feature dimensionality reduction may lead to misclassification. In contrast, efficient feature management can reduce storage and computational complexities, builds better classifiers, and improves overall performance. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) is a well-known dimension reduction technique that has been used for feature extraction. This paper presents a two-step PCA based feature extraction algorithm that employs a variant of feature-based PointNet (Qi et al., 2017a) for point cloud classification. This paper extends the PointNet framework for use on large-scale aerial LiDAR data, and contributes by (i) developing a new feature extraction algorithm, (ii) exploring the impact of dimensionality reduction in feature extraction, and (iii) introducing a non-end-to-end PointNet variant for per point classification in point clouds. This is demonstrated on aerial laser scanning (ALS) point clouds. The algorithm successfully reduces the dimension of the feature space without sacrificing performance, as benchmarked against the original PointNet algorithm. When tested on the well-known Vaihingen data set, the proposed algorithm achieves an Overall Accuracy (OA) of 74.64% by using 9 input vectors and 14 shape features, whereas with the same 9 input vectors and only 5PCs (principal components built by the 14 shape features) it actually achieves a higher OA of 75.36% which demonstrates the effect of efficient dimensionality reduction. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 56 (2 UL) |
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