Kunlin Wu

2papers

2 Papers

85.4MMApr 16Code
Geo2Sound: A Scalable Geo-Aligned Framework for Soundscape Generation from Satellite Imagery

Kunlin Wu, Yanning Wang, Haofeng Tan et al.

Recent image-to-audio models have shown impressive performance on object-centric visual scenes. However, their application to satellite imagery remains limited by the complex, wide-area semantic ambiguity of top-down views. While satellite imagery provides a uniquely scalable source for global soundscape generation, matching these views to real acoustic environments with unique spatial structures is inherently difficult. To address this challenge, we introduce Geo2Sound, a novel task and framework for generating geographically realistic soundscapes from satellite imagery. Specifically, Geo2Sound combines structural geospatial attributes modeling, semantic hypothesis expansion, and geo-acoustic alignment in a unified framework. A lightweight classifier summarizes overhead scenes into compact geographic attributes, multiple sound-oriented semantic hypotheses are used to generate diverse acoustically plausible candidates, and a geo-acoustic alignment module projects geographic attributes into the acoustic embedding space and identifies the candidate most consistent with the candidate sets. Moreover, we establish SatSound-Bench, the first benchmark comprising over 20k high-quality paired satellite images, text descriptions, and real-world audio recordings, collected from the field across more than 10 countries and complemented by three public datasets. Experiments show that Geo2Sound achieves a SOTA FAD of 1.765, outperforming the strongest baseline by 50.0%. Human evaluations further confirm substantial gains in both realism (26.5%) and semantic alignment, validating our high-fidelity synthesis on scale. Project page and source code: https://github.com/Blanketzzz/Geo2Sound

LGMar 17, 2022
STICC: A multivariate spatial clustering method for repeated geographic pattern discovery with consideration of spatial contiguity

Yuhao Kang, Kunlin Wu, Song Gao et al.

Spatial clustering has been widely used for spatial data mining and knowledge discovery. An ideal multivariate spatial clustering should consider both spatial contiguity and aspatial attributes. Existing spatial clustering approaches may face challenges for discovering repeated geographic patterns with spatial contiguity maintained. In this paper, we propose a Spatial Toeplitz Inverse Covariance-Based Clustering (STICC) method that considers both attributes and spatial relationships of geographic objects for multivariate spatial clustering. A subregion is created for each geographic object serving as the basic unit when performing clustering. A Markov random field is then constructed to characterize the attribute dependencies of subregions. Using a spatial consistency strategy, nearby objects are encouraged to belong to the same cluster. To test the performance of the proposed STICC algorithm, we apply it in two use cases. The comparison results with several baseline methods show that the STICC outperforms others significantly in terms of adjusted rand index and macro-F1 score. Join count statistics is also calculated and shows that the spatial contiguity is well preserved by STICC. Such a spatial clustering method may benefit various applications in the fields of geography, remote sensing, transportation, and urban planning, etc.