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Article Dans Une Revue Ecological Informatics Année : 2017

Propagating aleatory and epistemic uncertainty in land cover change prediction process

Résumé

An objective of satellite remote sensing is to predict or characterize the land cover change (LCC) over time. Sometimes we are capable of describing the changes of land cover with a probability distribution. However, we need sufficient knowledge about the natural variability of these changes, which is not always possible. In general, uncertainties can be subdivided into aleatory and epistemic. The main problem is that classical probability theory does not make a clear distinction between aleatory and epistemic uncertainties in the way they are represented, i.e., both of them are described with a probability distribution. The aim of this paper is to propagate the aleatory and epistemic uncertainty associated with both input parameters (features extracted from satellite image object) and model structure of LCC prediction process using belief function theory. This will help reducing in a significant way the uncertainty about future changes of land cover. In this study, the changes prediction of land cover in Cairo region, Egypt for next 16 years (2030) is anticipated using multi-temporal Landsat TM5 satellite images in 1987 and 2014. The LCC prediction model results indicated that 15% of the agriculture and 6.5% of the desert will be urbanized in 2030. We conclude that our method based on belief function theory has a potential to reduce uncertainty and improve the prediction accuracy and is applicable in LCC analysis.

Dates et versions

hal-01511263 , version 1 (20-04-2017)

Identifiants

Citer

Ahlem Ferchichi, Wadii Boulila, Imed Riadh Farah. Propagating aleatory and epistemic uncertainty in land cover change prediction process. Ecological Informatics, 2017, 37 (1), pp.24 - 37. ⟨10.1016/j.ecoinf.2016.11.006⟩. ⟨hal-01511263⟩
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