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Granular neural networks for land use classification

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Abstract

Granulation of information is a new way to describe the increased complexity of natural phenomena. The lack of clear borders in nature calls for a more efficient way to process such data. Land use both in general but also as perceived in satellite images is a typical example of data that are inherently not clearly delimited. A granular neural network (GNN) approach is used here to facilitate land use classification. The GNN model used combines membership functions of spectral as well as non-spectral spatial information to produce land use categories. Spectral information refers to IRS satellite image bands and non-spectral data are here of topographic nature, namely slope, aspect and elevation. The processing is done through a standard neural network trained by back-propagation learning algorithm. A thorough presentation of the results is given in order to evaluate the merits of this method.

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Vasilakos, A., Stathakis, D. Granular neural networks for land use classification. Soft Comput 9, 332–340 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00500-004-0412-5

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00500-004-0412-5

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