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Detección de Cambios×Métricas de Patrones del Paisaje×Clasificación de imágenes basada en píxeles×
CampoTeledetecciónAnálisis espacialTeledetección
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineMachine learning
Año de origen198919882007
Autor originalAshbindu SinghR. V. O'Neill et al.; McGarigal & Marks (FRAGSTATS)Remote-sensing classification literature
TipoMultitemporal image comparison pipelineQuantitative landscape pattern descriptionSupervised/unsupervised spectral image classification
Fuente seminalSingh, A. (1989). Digital change detection techniques using remotely-sensed data. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 10(6), 989–1003. DOI ↗O'Neill, R. V., et al. (1988). Indices of landscape pattern. Landscape Ecology, 1(3), 153–162. DOI ↗Lu, D., & Weng, Q. (2007). A survey of image classification methods and techniques for improving classification performance. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 28(5), 823–870. DOI ↗
AliasMultitemporal Image Analysis, Land-Cover Change Analysis, Bitemporal Change Analysis, Değişim Tespitilandscape pattern indices, FRAGSTATS metrics, fragmentation indices, peyzaj metrikleriPer-Pixel Classification, Spectral Classification, Pixel-by-Pixel Classification, Piksel Tabanlı Sınıflandırma
Relacionados232
ResumenChange detection is a remote sensing analysis pipeline that identifies differences in land cover or land use between two or more images acquired at different times over the same geographic area. Systematically reviewed and classified by Ashbindu Singh in 1989, the framework encompasses image differencing, post-classification comparison, vegetation index differencing, and principal component analysis, and remains the canonical reference for evaluating which technique best suits a given application.Landscape metrics are quantitative indices that describe the composition and spatial configuration of a categorical map — typically land cover — at the patch, class, and whole-landscape levels. Developed in landscape ecology (O'Neill and colleagues, 1988) and made widely usable by the FRAGSTATS software, they turn maps into numbers like patch density, edge density, fragmentation, diversity, and connectivity for ecological, planning, and change analysis.Pixel-based image classification is a fundamental remote-sensing technique that assigns each individual pixel in a satellite or aerial image to a thematic land-cover category based solely on its spectral values across multiple bands. Systematically surveyed and formalized by Lu and Weng (2007), the approach encompasses both supervised methods—where labeled training samples guide the classifier—and unsupervised clustering approaches that discover natural spectral groupings without prior labels.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Change Detection · Landscape Metrics · Pixel-Based Classification. Recuperado el 2026-06-17 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare