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Phenotyping urban built and natural environments with high-resolution satellite images and unsupervised deep learning

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posted on 2025-04-01, 13:13 authored by AB Metzler, R Nathvani, Viktoriia SharmanskaViktoriia Sharmanska, W Bai, E Muller, S Moulds, C Agyei-Asabere, D Adjei-Boadi, E Kyere-Gyeabour, JD Tetteh, G Owusu, S Agyei-Mensah, J Baumgartner, BE Robinson, RE Arku, M Ezzati
Cities in the developing world are expanding rapidly, and undergoing changes to their roads, buildings, vegetation, and other land use characteristics. Timely data are needed to ensure that urban change enhances health, wellbeing and sustainability. We present and evaluate a novel unsupervised deep clustering method to classify and characterise the complex and multidimensional built and natural environments of cities into interpretable clusters using high-resolution satellite images. We applied our approach to a high-resolution (0.3 m/pixel) satellite image of Accra, Ghana, one of the fastest growing cities in sub-Saharan Africa, and contextualised the results with demographic and environmental data that were not used for clustering. We show that clusters obtained solely from images capture distinct interpretable phenotypes of the urban natural (vegetation and water) and built (building count, size, density, and orientation; length and arrangement of roads) environment, and population, either as a unique defining characteristic (e.g., bodies of water or dense vegetation) or in combination (e.g., buildings surrounded by vegetation or sparsely populated areas intermixed with roads). Clusters that were based on a single defining characteristic were robust to the spatial scale of analysis and the choice of cluster number, whereas those based on a combination of characteristics changed based on scale and number of clusters. The results demonstrate that satellite data and unsupervised deep learning provide a cost-effective, interpretable and scalable approach for real-time tracking of sustainable urban development, especially where traditional environmental and demographic data are limited and infrequent.

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Published version

Journal

Science of the Total Environment

ISSN

0048-9697

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Volume

893

Page range

164794-

Article number

ARTN 164794

Department affiliated with

  • Informatics Publications

Institution

University of Sussex

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes