Human settlement expansion is one of the most pervasive forms of land cover change in the Gauteng province of South Africa. A method for detecting new settlement developments in areas that are typically covered by natural vegetation using 500m MODIS time-series satellite data is proposed. The method is a per pixel change alarm that uses the temporal autocorrelation to infer a change metric which yields a change or no-change decision after thresholding. Simulated change data was generated and used to determine a threshold during a preliminary off-line optimization phase. After optimization the method was evaluated on examples of known land cover change in the study area and experimental results indicate a 92% change detection accuracy with a 15% false alarm rate.
History
Publication title
Proceedings of the IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium 2011
Pagination
94-97
ISBN
978-1-4577-1003-2
Department/School
School of Engineering
Publisher
IEEE Explore
Place of publication
USA
Event title
IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium