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Collaborating Authors

 Nemni, Edoardo


Conditional Progressive Generative Adversarial Network for satellite image generation

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Image generation and image completion are rapidly evolving fields, thanks to machine learning algorithms that are able to realistically replace missing pixels. However, generating large high resolution images, with a large level of details, presents important computational challenges. In this work, we formulate the image generation task as completion of an image where one out of three corners is missing. We then extend this approach to iteratively build larger images with the same level of detail. Our goal is to obtain a scalable methodology to generate high resolution samples typically found in satellite imagery data sets. We introduce a conditional progressive Generative Adversarial Networks (GAN), that generates the missing tile in an image, using as input three initial adjacent tiles encoded in a latent vector by a Wasserstein auto-encoder. We focus on a set of images used by the United Nations Satellite Centre (UNOSAT) to train flood detection tools, and validate the quality of synthetic images in a realistic setup.


Deep learning based landslide density estimation on SAR data for rapid response

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

This work aims to produce landslide density estimates using Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) satellite imageries to prioritise emergency resources for rapid response. We use the United States Geological Survey (USGS) Landslide Inventory data annotated by experts after Hurricane Mar\'ia in Puerto Rico on Sept 20, 2017, and their subsequent susceptibility study which uses extensive additional information such as precipitation, soil moisture, geological terrain features, closeness to waterways and roads, etc. Since such data might not be available during other events or regions, we aimed to produce a landslide density map using only elevation and SAR data to be useful to decision-makers in rapid response scenarios. The USGS Landslide Inventory contains the coordinates of 71,431 landslide heads (not their full extent) and was obtained by manual inspection of aerial and satellite imagery. It is estimated that around 45\% of the landslides are smaller than a Sentinel-1 typical pixel which is 10m $\times$ 10m, although many are long and thin, probably leaving traces across several pixels. Our method obtains 0.814 AUC in predicting the correct density estimation class at the chip level (128$\times$128 pixels, at Sentinel-1 resolution) using only elevation data and up to three SAR acquisitions pre- and post-hurricane, thus enabling rapid assessment after a disaster. The USGS Susceptibility Study reports a 0.87 AUC, but it is measured at the landslide level and uses additional information sources (such as proximity to fluvial channels, roads, precipitation, etc.) which might not regularly be available in an rapid response emergency scenario.


Proceedings of NeurIPS 2020 Workshop on Artificial Intelligence for Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Response

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

These are the "proceedings" of the 2nd AI + HADR workshop which was held virtually on December 12, 2020 as part of the Neural Information Processing Systems conference. These are non-archival and merely serve as a way to collate all the papers accepted to the workshop.