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Making satellites sense better where bigger floods are raising the stakes
Using “fuzzy logic,” researchers aggregated time-series images of a notorious 2020 flood in central China to extract more useful data for emergency management officials.
This article is part of our exclusive IEEE Journal Watch series in partnership with IEEE Xplore.
During the summer of 2020, China’s second-largest freshwater body of water—Dongting Lake—experienced unprecedented levels of flooding, the likes of which had not been seen over the previous two decades. As a result of unusually high volumes of rainfall, these floods and others throughout the country that summer took at least 141 lives and caused upwards of US$8 billion in infrastructural damage.
And while devastating floods like this are on the rise in a world of mounting climate change, technology used to detect, monitor, and predict flooding is lagging behind. Ground-gathered data can lead to time-delayed and inaccurate mapping—but of course is often more reliable. So remote-sensing data from satellites should be able to supplement what ground-truths cannot deliver in time or at wide enough scales. The problem, however, is that satellite data today still faces challenges from cloud cover and dataset noise.
So a team of researchers located only a few hours south of Dongting Lake at Hunan University in China has reported a new approach to monitoring flood regions using time-series synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images and “fuzzy logic” feature detection.
Xinxin Liu is a coauthor on the paper and an associate professor of electrical and information engineering at Hunan University. She says that part of the problem faced by existing SAR flood models is they’re not designed to accommodate how data changes over days or months. This includes important features like backscatter values, which represent information about ground objects like vegetation.
“The backscatter characteristics of radar signals are very complex,” Liu says. “In the same flood event, similar backscatter values may represent flooded or non-flooded areas on different flood days. Thus, it is difficult to achieve accurate flood mapping by using only spatial or limited temporal information.”
Liu and colleagues have worked to address this problem by looking at SAR data over a yearlong time period to help identify specific flood patterns, such as when flood waters typically rise or recede. They combined this time-series approach with feature extraction using fuzzy logic to help choose features from both spatial and temporal domains.
“The proposed method has good consistency and stability in mapping the development of flood events, [and] it can also identify flood regions that are prone to misidentification or omission thanks to time-series modeling,” Liu says. “What’s more, in the case of limited or lack of data, the existing historical multi-temporal dataset can be reused to evaluate the current flood event, broadening the application scenarios of the proposed methods.”
Liu says that this method can be used to help restore areas damaged by floods, as well as create rapid flood mapping during an ongoing flood event.
To put this method to the test, Liu and colleagues applied it to data from the 2020 Dongting floods. In particular, they evaluated seven images of the flooding collected between early July and early September of that year and seventeen images from non-flood periods. They also manually collected ground-truth data from the flood area for comparison.
When compared to the ground-truth data as well as competing deep-learning and unsupervised models, the team found their model had high accuracy and outperformed the non-time-sensitive models, which make mistakes like incorrectly identifying a rice paddy as a flooded area. The team also reported similar levels of accuracy when evaluating two additional flood-prone regions, China’s Poyang Lake and Peru’s Lago La Nina.
Going forward, the team is looking forward to improving this model to make it more practical, such as reducing the number of non-flood images the model needs in order to map the area. Liu says the team is also interested in how historical data can be used to better understand the changing flood patterns over time.
“Because our method can reuse the historical data, we are also thinking about whether we can create some benchmark pattern of flood events based on historical data and apply them to the rapid warning of flood risk,” she says. “This should be more interesting and meaningful.”
This work was published in October in the journal of IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing.
Sarah Wells is a science and technology journalist interested in how innovation and research intersect with our daily lives. She has written for a number of national publications, including Popular Mechanics, Popular Science, and Motherboard.