CVAIApr 12, 2024

Analyzing Decades-Long Environmental Changes in Namibia Using Archival Aerial Photography and Deep Learning

arXiv:2404.08544v2h-index: 20STAI@IJCAI
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

It addresses the challenge of analyzing long-term environmental changes in regions like Africa where historical satellite data is lacking, though it is incremental in applying existing deep learning methods to new archival data.

This study tackled the problem of detecting environmental changes in Namibia over decades by using deep learning on archival aerial photographs from 1943 and 1972, achieving F1 scores of 0.661 and 0.755 for identifying objects like waterholes and trees.

This study explores object detection in historical aerial photographs of Namibia to identify long-term environmental changes. Specifically, we aim to identify key objects -- Waterholes, Omuti homesteads, and Big trees -- around Oshikango in Namibia using sub-meter gray-scale aerial imagery from 1943 and 1972. In this work, we propose a workflow for analyzing historical aerial imagery using a deep semantic segmentation model on sparse hand-labels. To this end, we employ a number of strategies including class-weighting, pseudo-labeling and empirical p-value-based filtering to balance skewed and sparse representations of objects in the ground truth data. Results demonstrate the benefits of these different training strategies resulting in an average $F_1=0.661$ and $F_1=0.755$ over the three objects of interest for the 1943 and 1972 imagery, respectively. We also identified that the average size of Waterhole and Big trees increased while the average size of Omuti homesteads decreased between 1943 and 1972 reflecting some of the local effects of the massive post-Second World War economic, agricultural, demographic, and environmental changes. This work also highlights the untapped potential of historical aerial photographs in understanding long-term environmental changes beyond Namibia (and Africa). With the lack of adequate satellite technology in the past, archival aerial photography offers a great alternative to uncover decades-long environmental changes.

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