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ChangeEventDatasetforDiscoveryfrom Spatio-temporalRemoteSensingImagery

Neural Information Processing Systems

Thus, instead of simply detecting changed pixels, we want to identify change events. We define a change event as a group of pixels over space and time that are all changed by a single event. Weareinterested indeveloping systems thatcanautomatically detectchangeeventsandassign to each a semantic label that indicates the nature of the event, e.g., forest fires, road construction etc. Identifying change events is a much more challenging problem than change detection.




Fire and Smoke Datasets in 20 Years: An In-depth Review

Boroujeni, Sayed Pedram Haeri, Mehrabi, Niloufar, Afghah, Fatemeh, McGrath, Connor Peter, Bhatkar, Danish, Biradar, Mithilesh Anil, Razi, Abolfazl

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Fire and smoke phenomena pose a significant threat to the natural environment, ecosystems, and global economy, as well as human lives and wildlife. In this particular circumstance, there is a demand for more sophisticated and advanced technologies to implement an effective strategy for early detection, real-time monitoring, and minimizing the overall impacts of fires on ecological balance and public safety. Recently, the rapid advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Computer Vision (CV) frameworks has substantially revolutionized the momentum for developing efficient fire management systems. However, these systems extensively rely on the availability of adequate and high-quality fire and smoke data to create proficient Machine Learning (ML) methods for various tasks, such as detection and monitoring. Although fire and smoke datasets play a critical role in training, evaluating, and testing advanced Deep Learning (DL) models, a comprehensive review of the existing datasets is still unexplored. For this purpose, we provide an in-depth review to systematically analyze and evaluate fire and smoke datasets collected over the past 20 years. We investigate the characteristics of each dataset, including type, size, format, collection methods, and geographical diversities. We also review and highlight the unique features of each dataset, such as imaging modalities (RGB, thermal, infrared) and their applicability for different fire management tasks (classification, segmentation, detection). Furthermore, we summarize the strengths and weaknesses of each dataset and discuss their potential for advancing research and technology in fire management. Ultimately, we conduct extensive experimental analyses across different datasets using several state-of-the-art algorithms, such as ResNet-50, DeepLab-V3, and YoloV8.


Advancing Eurasia Fire Understanding Through Machine Learning Techniques

Kriuk, Boris

arXiv.org Machine Learning

Modern fire management systems increasingly rely on satellite data and weather forecasting; however, access to comprehensive datasets remains limited due to proprietary restrictions. Despite the ecological significance of wildfires, large-scale, multi-regional research is constrained by data scarcity. Russian diverse ecosystems play a crucial role in shaping Eurasian fire dynamics, yet they remain underexplored. This study addresses existing gaps by introducing an open-access dataset that captures detailed fire incidents alongside corresponding meteorological conditions. We present one of the most extensive datasets available for wildfire analysis in Russia, covering 13 consecutive months of observations. Leveraging machine learning techniques, we conduct exploratory data analysis and develop predictive models to identify key fire behavior patterns across different fire categories and ecosystems. Our results highlight the critical influence of environmental factor patterns on fire occurrence and spread behavior. By improving the understanding of wildfire dynamics in Eurasia, this work contributes to more effective, data-driven approaches for proactive fire management in the face of evolving environmental conditions.


Active Learning for Identifying Disaster-Related Tweets: A Comparison with Keyword Filtering and Generic Fine-Tuning

Hanny, David, Schmidt, Sebastian, Resch, Bernd

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Information from social media can provide essential information for emergency response during natural disasters in near real-time. However, it is difficult to identify the disaster-related posts among the large amounts of unstructured data available. Previous methods often use keyword filtering, topic modelling or classification-based techniques to identify such posts. Active Learning (AL) presents a promising sub-field of Machine Learning (ML) that has not been used much in the field of text classification of social media content. This study therefore investigates the potential of AL for identifying disaster-related Tweets. We compare a keyword filtering approach, a RoBERTa model fine-tuned with generic data from CrisisLex, a base RoBERTa model trained with AL and a fine-tuned RoBERTa model trained with AL regarding classification performance. For testing, data from CrisisLex and manually labelled data from the 2021 flood in Germany and the 2023 Chile forest fires were considered. The results show that generic fine-tuning combined with 10 rounds of AL outperformed all other approaches. Consequently, a broadly applicable model for the identification of disaster-related Tweets could be trained with very little labelling effort. The model can be applied to use cases beyond this study and provides a useful tool for further research in social media analysis.


Learning Locally Interacting Discrete Dynamical Systems: Towards Data-Efficient and Scalable Prediction

Kang, Beomseok, Kumar, Harshit, Lee, Minah, Chakraborty, Biswadeep, Mukhopadhyay, Saibal

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Locally interacting dynamical systems, such as epidemic spread, rumor propagation through crowd, and forest fire, exhibit complex global dynamics originated from local, relatively simple, and often stochastic interactions between dynamic elements. Their temporal evolution is often driven by transitions between a finite number of discrete states. Despite significant advancements in predictive modeling through deep learning, such interactions among many elements have rarely explored as a specific domain for predictive modeling. We present Attentive Recurrent Neural Cellular Automata (AR-NCA), to effectively discover unknown local state transition rules by associating the temporal information between neighboring cells in a permutation-invariant manner. AR-NCA exhibits the superior generalizability across various system configurations (i.e., spatial distribution of states), data efficiency and robustness in extremely data-limited scenarios even in the presence of stochastic interactions, and scalability through spatial dimension-independent prediction. Our code and supplementary material are available in https://github.com/beomseokg/ARNCA. Keywords: Local Interaction, Discrete Dynamical System, Neural Cellular Automata


Decision support system for Forest fire management using Ontology with Big Data and LLMs

Chandra, Ritesh, Kumar, Shashi Shekhar, Patra, Rushil, Agarwal, Sonali

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Forests are crucial for ecological balance, but wildfires, a major cause of forest loss, pose significant risks. Fire weather indices, which assess wildfire risk and predict resource demands, are vital. With the rise of sensor networks in fields like healthcare and environmental monitoring, semantic sensor networks are increasingly used to gather climatic data such as wind speed, temperature, and humidity. However, processing these data streams to determine fire weather indices presents challenges, underscoring the growing importance of effective forest fire detection. This paper discusses using Apache Spark for early forest fire detection, enhancing fire risk prediction with meteorological and geographical data. Building on our previous development of Semantic Sensor Network (SSN) ontologies and Semantic Web Rules Language (SWRL) for managing forest fires in Monesterial Natural Park, we expanded SWRL to improve a Decision Support System (DSS) using a Large Language Models (LLMs) and Spark framework. We implemented real-time alerts with Spark streaming, tailored to various fire scenarios, and validated our approach using ontology metrics, query-based evaluations, LLMs score precision, F1 score, and recall measures.


CaBuAr: California Burned Areas dataset for delineation

Cambrin, Daniele Rege, Colomba, Luca, Garza, Paolo

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Forest wildfires represent one of the catastrophic events that, over the last decades, caused huge environmental and humanitarian damages. In addition to a significant amount of carbon dioxide emission, they are a source of risk to society in both short-term (e.g., temporary city evacuation due to fire) and long-term (e.g., higher risks of landslides) cases. Consequently, the availability of tools to support local authorities in automatically identifying burned areas plays an important role in the continuous monitoring requirement to alleviate the aftereffects of such catastrophic events. The great availability of satellite acquisitions coupled with computer vision techniques represents an important step in developing such tools. This paper introduces a novel open dataset that tackles the burned area delineation problem, a binary segmentation problem applied to satellite imagery. The presented resource consists of pre- and post-fire Sentinel-2 L2A acquisitions of California forest fires that took place starting in 2015. Raster annotations were generated from the data released by California's Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. Moreover, in conjunction with the dataset, we release three different baselines based on spectral indexes analyses, SegFormer, and U-Net models.


MultiEarth 2023 -- Multimodal Learning for Earth and Environment Workshop and Challenge

Cha, Miriam, Angelides, Gregory, Hamilton, Mark, Soszynski, Andy, Swenson, Brandon, Maidel, Nathaniel, Isola, Phillip, Perron, Taylor, Freeman, Bill

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The Multimodal Learning for Earth and Environment Workshop (MultiEarth 2023) is the second annual CVPR workshop aimed at the monitoring and analysis of the health of Earth ecosystems by leveraging the vast amount of remote sensing data that is continuously being collected. The primary objective of this workshop is to bring together the Earth and environmental science communities as well as the multimodal representation learning communities to explore new ways of harnessing technological advancements in support of environmental monitoring. The MultiEarth Workshop also seeks to provide a common benchmark for processing multimodal remote sensing information by organizing public challenges focused on monitoring the Amazon rainforest. These challenges include estimating deforestation, detecting forest fires, translating synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images to the visible domain, and projecting environmental trends. This paper presents the challenge guidelines, datasets, and evaluation metrics. Our challenge website is available at https://sites.google.com/view/rainforest-challenge/multiearth-2023.