Persistent Identifier
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doi:10.11588/data/D3WZID |
Publication Date
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2023-07-20 |
Title
| Classification of structural building damage grades from multi-temporal photogrammetric point clouds using a machine learning model trained on virtual laser scanning data [Data and Source Code] |
Author
| Zahs, Vivien (3D Geospatial Data Processing Group, Institute of Geography, Heidelberg University, Germany) - ORCID: 0000-0001-8200-1661
Anders, Katharina (3D Geospatial Data Processing Group, Institute of Geography, Heidelberg University, Germany)
Kohns, Julia (Institute of Reinforced Concrete Structures and Building Materials, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany)
Stark, Alexander (Institute of Reinforced Concrete Structures and Building Materials, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany)
Höfle, Bernhard (3D Geospatial Data Processing Group, Institute of Geography, Heidelberg University, Germany) - ORCID: 0000-0001-5849-1461 |
Point of Contact
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Use email button above to contact.
Zahs, Vivien (3D Geospatial Data Processing Group, Institute of Geography, Heidelberg University, Germany) |
Description
| Automatic damage assessment by analysing UAV-derived 3D point clouds provides fast information on the damage situation after an earthquake. However, the assessment of different damage grades is challenging given the variety in damage characteristics and limited transferability of methods to other geographic regions or data sources. We present a novel change-based approach to automatically assess multi-class building damage from real-world point clouds using a machine learning model trained on virtual laser scanning (VLS) data. Therein, we (1) identify object-specific point cloud-based change features, (2) extract changed building parts using k-means clustering, (3) train a random forest machine learning model with VLS data based on object-specific change features, and (4) use the classifier to assess building damage in real-world photogrammetric point clouds. We evaluate the classifier with respect to its capacity to classify three damage grades (heavy, extreme, destruction) in pre-event and post-event point clouds of an earthquake in L’Aquila (Italy). Using object-specific change features derived from bi-temporal point clouds, our approach is transferable with respect to multi-source input point clouds used for model training (VLS) and application (real-world photogrammetry). We further achieve geographic transferability by using simulated training data which characterises damage grades across different geographic regions. The model yields high multi-target classification accuracies (overall accuracy: 92.0%–95.1%). Classification performance improves only slightly when using real-world region-specific training data (3% higher overall accuracies). We consider our approach especially relevant for applications where timely information on the damage situation is required and sufficient real-world training data is not available.
This dataset includes
- 3D building models (building_models.zip) representing the target damage grades (no damage, heavy damage, extreme damage, destruction) of this study
- Python source code (code.zip) used in this study to (1) generate simulated multi-temporal 3D point clouds using HELIOS++ (https://github.com/3dgeo-heidelberg/helios), (2) extract damaged building parts using k-means clustering, (3) compute object-specific geometric change features per building (4) train a multi-target random forest classifier to classify buildings into four damage grades based on object-specific change features.
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Subject
| Earth and Environmental Sciences |
Keyword
| change detection
UAV
3D
damage classification
earthquake
natural hazards |
Related Publication
| Zahs, V., Anders, K., Kohns, J., Stark, A. & Höfle, B. (2023): Classification of structural building damage grades from multi-temporal photogrammetric point clouds using a machine learning model trained on virtual laser scanning data. International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation. Vol. 122, pp. 103406. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jag.2023.103406 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jag.2023.103406 |
Software
| HELIOS+++ |
Related Material
| For HELIOS++ software see:
Winiwarter, L., Esmorís Pena, A., Weiser, H., Anders, K., Martínez Sanchez, J., Searle, M., Höfle, B. (2022): Virtual laser scanning with HELIOS++: A novel take on ray tracing-based simulation of topographic full-waveform 3D laser scanning. Remote Sensing of Environment, 269, doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2021.112772. |