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Original Articles

Estimating impervious surfaces using linear spectral mixture analysis with multitemporal ASTER images

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Pages 4807-4830 | Received 18 Jun 2007, Accepted 05 Oct 2007, Published online: 07 Sep 2009
 

Abstract

Impervious surface is a key indicator of urban environmental quality and degree of urbanization. Therefore, estimation and mapping of impervious surfaces by using remote sensing digital images has attracted increasing attention recently. For mid-latitude cities, seasonal vegetation phenology has a significant effect on the spectral response of terrestrial features, and image analysis must take into account this environmental characteristic. In this paper, three Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) images, acquired on 3 October 2000, 16 June 2001 and 5 April 2004, respectively, were used to test the seasonal sensitivity of impervious surface estimation. The study area was the city of Indianapolis (Marion County), Indiana, USA. Linear spectral mixture analysis (LSMA) was applied to generate high-albedo, low-albedo, vegetation and soil fraction images (endmembers), and impervious surfaces were then estimated by adding high- and low-albedo fraction images. In addition, land use/land cover (LULC) and land surface temperature (LST) maps were generated and used to create image masks to remove non-impervious pixels. The accuracy of the impervious surface maps was checked against Digital Orthophoto Quarter Quadrangle (DOQQ) images. Three accuracy indicators, the root mean square error (RMSE), mean average error (MAE) and correlation coefficient (R 2), were calculated and compared to analyse the seasonal sensitivity of impervious surface estimation. Our results indicate that vegetation phenology has a fundamental impact on impervious surface estimation. The summer (June) image was better for impervious surface estimation than the spring (April) and autumn (October) images. The LULC and LST image masks can significantly increase the accuracy of impervious surface estimation. The mean LST was found appropriate to be set as the threshold for the various image masks. A summer image was most appropriate because there was full growth of vegetation, and mapping of impervious surfaces was more effective with a contrasting spectral response from green vegetation. The mixing space, based on the four endmembers, was perfectly three-dimensional. By contrast, there was significant amount of bare soil and ground and non-photosynthetic vegetation in the spring and autumn images. Plant phenology caused changes in the variance partitioning and impacted the mixing space characterization, leading to a less accurate estimation of the impervious surfaces.

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by the National Science Foundation (BCS-0521734) as part of a project entitled ‘Role of urban canopy composition and structure in determining heat islands: a synthesis of remote sensing and landscape ecology approach’. We thank the Editor, Prof. Costas Varotsos and two anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments and suggestions.

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