GEOBIA an (Geographic) Object-Based Image Analysis for coastal mapping in Indonesia: A Review

The traditionally human-visual or manual interpretation is generally chosen method for spatial feature extraction on map producing process in Indonesia, although the pixel-based feature extraction is used in particular step. The main problem of human-visual method is the dependency to operator capac...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIOP conference series. Earth and environmental science Vol. 162; no. 1; pp. 12039 - 12056
Main Authors Hidayat, F, Rudiastuti, A W, Purwono, N
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bristol IOP Publishing 01.06.2018
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Summary:The traditionally human-visual or manual interpretation is generally chosen method for spatial feature extraction on map producing process in Indonesia, although the pixel-based feature extraction is used in particular step. The main problem of human-visual method is the dependency to operator capacity. Subjectivity may occur because each operator has different ability. In early 20th century, the image segmentation method was still developing and now Geographic Object-based Image Analysis (GEOBIA) method is introduced to mapping process. Researchers are still developing and applying GEOBIA for many mapping purposes. The advantage of GEOBIA is object-based segmentation which contextually influenced by spatial feature characteristics. GEOBIA provides more meaningful information than traditional pixel-based image analysis by allowing less well-defined edges or borders between different classes. On the resulting maps, there are divisions between different types of object classification, for example where some species of mangroves meet are not generally represented by a single object. The developing of remotely sensed imagery data quality requires the developing of extraction method as well. This article discusses the implementation of GEOBIA for coastal mapping in Indonesia. Some research combined pixel-based and GEOBIA method, and some get the overall accuracy > 70% of GEOBIA method. By developing a new segmentation accuracy measure, we evaluated that segmentation accuracies decrease with increasing segmentation scales and the negative impact of under-segmentation errors become significantly rise at large scale. The use of GEOBIA for coastal mapping in Indonesia are still lacking, locally applicable and still developing the transferability rule sets. The conclusion is that the innovation is needed to make GEOBIA method applicable for mass production of Indonesian coastal map.
ISSN:1755-1307
1755-1315
DOI:10.1088/1755-1315/162/1/012039