AI system identifies buildings damaged by wildfire
People around the globe have suffered the nerve-wracking anxiety of waiting weeks or months to find out if their homes have been damaged by wildfires that scorch with increased intensity. Now, once the smoke has cleared for aerial photography, researchers have found a way to identify building damage within minutes. Through a system they call DamageMap, a team at Stanford University and the California Polytechnic State University (Cal Poly) has brought an artificial intelligence approach to building assessment: Instead of comparing before-and-after photos, they've trained a program using machine learning to rely solely on post-fire images. The findings appear in the International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction. "We wanted to automate the process and make it much faster for first responders or even for citizens that might want to know what happened to their house after a wildfire," said lead study author Marios Galanis, a graduate student in the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department at Stanford's School of Engineering.
Sep-17-2021, 01:30:18 GMT
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- North America > United States > California > Butte County > Paradise (0.05)
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- Research Report > New Finding (0.70)
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- Media > Photography (1.00)
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