Note: This document is for an older version of GRASS GIS that will be discontinued soon. You should upgrade, and read the current manual page.
i.segment.uspo provides unsupervised segmentation parameter optimization for i.segment determined by the compromise between intra-segment variance and inter-segment spatial autocorrelation.
The module runs segmentation across a user defined set of thresholds and minimum segment sizes, as well, for the mean shift algorithm, a set of spectral and spatial bandwiths. For the mean shift algorithm, you can also activate adaptive bandwidth using the -a flag.
The user provides an imagery group and the name of an output text file where parameter and optimization values for all tested segmentations are stored. The user can either give a list of thresholds and minimum sizes, or provides start, stop and step values for each. In addition, the user can provide a list of named regions for which to test the segmentation. This allows to not test the entire image, but rather to test specific areas in the image that might be characterstic for specific types of land cover.
The module then selects the parameters providing the highest values of a given optimization function. The number of "best" parameter combinations to provide to the user per region is defined by number_best.
Two optimization functions are available via the optimization_function parameter: A simple sum of the normalized criteria values as defined by Espindola et al (2006), or the F-function as defined by Johnson et al (2015). When using the F-function, the user can determine the f_function_alpha value which determines the relative weight of the intra-segment variance as compared to the inter-segment spatial autocorrelation. A value of 0.5 gives the former half weight of the latter, A value of 2 gives the former double weight than the latter.
The optimization functions use intra-segment variance and inter-segment spatial autocorrelation. For the latter, the user can chose to use either Moran's I or Geary's C.
The user can chose between non-hierarchical (default) and hierarchical segmentation using the h flag. The latter uses each segmentation at a given threshold level as seed for the segmentation at the next threshold level within a given minimum segment size. Note that this leads to less optimal parallelization as for a given minsize, all segmentations have to be done sequentially (see below).
The segment_map parameter allows to provide a basename for keeping the number_best best segmentations for each given region according to the optimization function. The resulting map names will be a combination of this basename, the region, the threshold, the minsize and the rank of the map within the region according to its optimization criteria value.
The module uses high-level parallelization (running different segmentations in parallel and then running the collection of parameter values in parallel). The parameter processes allows to define how many processes should be run in parallel. Note that when using hierarchical segmentation the number of parallel processes is limited to the number of different mininum segment sizes to test.
The k flag allows to keep all segmentation maps created during the process.
The module depends on the addon r.neighborhoodmatrix which needs to be installed.
Any unsupervised optimization can at best be a support to the user. Visual and other types of validation of the results, possibly comparing several of the "best" solutions, remain necessary.
Even though the module allows the user to test different minsizes, it is probably better to run the module with minsizes=1 and then adapt the minsize in the final run of i.segment depending on the desired minimum mapping unit.
In hierarchical segmentation mode, each segmentation is used as seed for the next hierarchical level. This means that these segmentations have to be run sequentially. Currently, parallelization is thus only used if more than one value was given for minsize. In a future version, parallelization should optionally be run by region if the number of regions is larger than the number of different minsize values.
g.region -au n=220767 s=220392 w=638129 e=638501 res=1 save=region1 g.region -au n=222063 s=221667 w=637659 e=638058 res=1 save=region2 i.group ortho input=ortho_2001_t792_1m i.segment.uspo group=ortho regions=region1,region2 \ output=ortho_parameters.csv segment_map=ortho_uspo \ threshold_start=0.02 threshold_stop=0.21 threshold_step=0.02 \ minsizes=5,10,15 number_best=5 processes=4 memory=4000
Available at: i.segment.uspo source code (history)
Latest change: Tuesday Mar 26 20:41:36 2024 in commit: 3b09b1d78f6e96ffebacac6e36f0afd91ad0c091
Note: This document is for an older version of GRASS GIS that will be discontinued soon. You should upgrade, and read the current manual page.
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