EvaNet: Elevation-Guided Flood Extent Mapping on Earth Imagery (Extended Version)
This work addresses flood mapping for disaster management, offering a domain-specific improvement over existing methods.
The paper tackles the problem of inaccurate flood extent mapping from satellite imagery due to ambiguous pixels like tree canopies and clouds, by proposing EvaNet, an elevation-guided segmentation model that integrates digital elevation model data; it significantly outperforms U-Net baselines, serving as a drop-in replacement with improved accuracy.
Accurate and timely mapping of flood extent from high-resolution satellite imagery plays a crucial role in disaster management such as damage assessment and relief activities. However, current state-of-the-art solutions are based on U-Net, which can-not segment the flood pixels accurately due to the ambiguous pixels (e.g., tree canopies, clouds) that prevent a direct judgement from only the spectral features. Thanks to the digital elevation model (DEM) data readily available from sources such as United States Geological Survey (USGS), this work explores the use of an elevation map to improve flood extent mapping. We propose, EvaNet, an elevation-guided segmentation model based on the encoder-decoder architecture with two novel techniques: (1) a loss function encoding the physical law of gravity that if a location is flooded (resp. dry), then its adjacent locations with a lower (resp. higher) elevation must also be flooded (resp. dry); (2) a new (de)convolution operation that integrates the elevation map by a location sensitive gating mechanism to regulate how much spectral features flow through adjacent layers. Extensive experiments show that EvaNet significantly outperforms the U-Net baselines, and works as a perfect drop-in replacement for U-Net in existing solutions to flood extent mapping.