Abstract
Machine learning has found many applications in remote sensing. These applications range from retrieval algorithms to bias correction, from code acceleration to detection of disease in crops, from classification of pelagic habitats to rock type classification. As a broad subfield of artificial intelligence, machine learning is concerned with algorithms and techniques that allow computers to “learn” by example. The major focus of machine learning is to extract information from data automatically by computational and statistical methods. Over the last decade there has been considerable progress in developing a machine learning methodology for a variety of Earth Science applications involving trace gases, retrievals, aerosol products, land surface products, vegetation indices, and most recently, ocean applications. In this chapter, we will review some examples of how machine learning has already been useful for remote sensing and some likely future applications.
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Introduction
Beyond remote sensing, machine learning has already proved immensely useful in a wide variety of applications in science, business, health care, and engineering. Machine learning allows us to learn by example, and to give our data a voice. It is particularly useful for those applications for which we do not have a complete theory, yet which are of significance. Machine learning is an automated implementation of the scientific method (Domingos, 2015), following the same process of generating, testing, and discarding or refining hypotheses. While a scientist or engineer may spend his entire career coming up with and testing a few hundred hypotheses, a machine-learning system can do the same in a fraction of a second. Machine learning provides an objective set of tools for automating discovery. It is therefore not surprising that machine learning is currently revolutionizing many areas of science, technology, business, and medicine (Lary et al., 2016).
Machine learning is now being routinely used to work with large volumes of data in a variety of formats such as image, video, sensor, health records, etc. Machine learning can be used in understanding this data and creating predictive and classification tools. When machine learning is used for regression, empirical models are built to predict continuous data, facilitating the prediction of future data points, e.g. algorithmic trading and electricity load forecasting. When machine learning is used for classification, empirical models are built to classify the data into different categories, aiding in the more accurately analysis and visualization of the data. Applications of classification include facial recognition, credit scoring, and cancer detection. When machine learning is used for clustering, or unsupervised classification, it aids in finding the natural groupings and patterns in data. Applications of clustering include medical imaging, object recognition, and pattern mining. Object recognition is a process for identifying a specific object in a digital image or video. Object recognition algorithms rely on matching, learning, or pattern recognition algorithms using appearance-based or feature-based techniques. These technologies are being used for applications such as driver-less cars, automated skin cancer detection, etc.
There are now a variety of open source tools that can greatly facilitate the use of machine learning, such as scikit-learn,Footnote 1 TensorFlow,Footnote 2 Caffe,Footnote 3 and Spark Mlib.Footnote 4 Common programming environments used for machine learning include R,Footnote 5 Python,Footnote 6 and Matlab.Footnote 7 All of the applications shown in this chapter used matlab.
In this paper we will give an overview of several remote sensing applications of machine learning made over the last two decades and then take a look ahead to some likely future applications.
What Is Machine Learning?
Machine learning is an automated approach to building empirical models from the data alone. A key advantage of this is that we make no a priori assumptions about the data, its functional form, or probability distributions. It is an empirical approach, so we do not need to provide a theoretical model. However, it also means that for machine learning to provide the best performance we do need a comprehensive representative set of examples, that spans as much of the parameter space as possible. This comprehensive set of examples is referred to as the training data.
So, for a successful application of machine learning we have two key ingredients, both of which are essential, a machine learning algorithm, and a comprehensive training data set. Then, once the training has been performed, we should test its efficacy using an independent validation data set to see how well it performs when presented with data that the algorithm has not previously seen, i.e. test its generalization. This can be, for example, a randomly selected subset of the training data that was held back and then utilized for independent validation.
It should be noted that with a given machine learning algorithm, the performance can go from poor to outstanding with the provision of a progressively more complete training data set. Machine learning really is learning by example, so it is critical to provide as complete a training data set as possible. At times, this can be a labor-intensive endeavor.
When using machine learning we are typically performing one of three tasks:
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Multivariate non-linear non-parametric regression.
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Supervised classification.
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Unsupervised classification.
Each of these tasks can be achieved by a variety of different algorithms. Some of the commonly used algorithms include Neural Networks (McCulloch and Pitts, 1943; Haykin, 2001, 2007, 1994, 1999; Demuth et al., 2014; Bishop, 1995), Support Vector Machines (Vapnik, 1982, 1995, 2000, 2006; Cortes and Vapnik, 1995), Decision Trees (Safavian and Landgrebe, 1991), and Random Forests (Ho, 1998; Breiman, 1984, 2001).
Let us now turn our attention to some examples.
Some Existing Machine Learning Applications
We will start by looking at several examples of bias correction. Bias identification and correction is of particular importance for every single remote sensing instrument. Bias correction can also prove to be a particularly challenging issue, one which involves multiple factors.
Machine Learning for Bias Correction and Cross Calibration
The ubiquitous issue of inter-instrument biases is an obvious example of where we do not have a complete theoretical understanding, and so machine learning can be of particular use.
In many areas of remote sensing we have multiple instruments simultaneously observing the earth on a variety of platforms. Many of these sensors may be providing data on the same parameters, such as the surface vegetation, the composition of the atmosphere or ocean. A ubiquitous issue faced is inter-instrument bias between the contemporaneously observing instruments. This inter-instrument bias can be due to a variety of known reasons that may include different instruments, different observing geometry and orbits, etc., as well as some causes that we do not know.
This is an important issue, as we routinely need to provide data fusion of multiple datasets. Datasets which are inevitably biased relative to each other, sometimes even after the mandatory calibration/validation process. When we are seeking to construct a long-term record spanning many decades this inevitably will often involve a large number of instruments, a matter very relevant for climate variables. In addition, Data Assimilation has become an important part of effectively utilizing remotely sensed data. However, data assimilation is a Best Linear Unbiased Estimator (BLUE), and fusing biased data can cause serious issues.
This data fusion typically involves large teams of scientists and engineers. On the one hand, the instrument teams have a keen sense of faithfully reporting the data, as it is, warts and all. They are naturally loath to empirically correct biases; they would like to theoretically understand the cause of the bias and data issues from first principles. However, as the Earth System is so complex, with many interacting processes, and often the instruments are also complex, this is not always possible. Residual data issues can, and usually do, remain. On the other hand, the modelers know that data bias exists, but are very reticent to make changes to data products that they did not collect, so we therefore have a problem of closure.
Biases are ubiquitous, not all of them can be explained theoretically. Yet, we typically need to fuse multiple datasets to construct long-term time series and/or improve global coverage. If the biases are not corrected before data fusion we introduce further problems, such as spurious trends, leading to the possibility of unsuitable policy decisions. When data assimilation is involved, any use of biased observations can lead to the sub-optimal use of the observations, non-physical structures in the analysis, biases in the assimilated fields, and extrapolation of biases due to multivariate background constraints. To compound matters further, the instruments whose data we would like to fuse are often not making coincident measurements in time or space. It is imperative to inter-compare observations in their appropriate context and be able to address the pernicious issue of inter-instrument bias. An issue where machine learning has proved to be most useful. Let us now take a look at some examples.
Vegetation Indices
Consistent, long-term vegetation data records are critical for analysis of the impact of global change on terrestrial ecosystems. Continuous observations of terrestrial ecosystems through time are necessary to document changes in magnitude or variability in an ecosystem. Satellite remote sensing has been the primary tool for scientists to measure global trends in vegetation, as the measurements are both global and temporally frequent. To extend measurements through time, multiple sensors with different design and resolution must be used together in the same time series. This presents significant problems as sensor band placement, spectral response, processing, and atmospheric correction of the observations can vary significantly and impact the comparability of the measurements.
Even without differences in atmospheric correction, vegetation index values for the same target recorded under identical conditions will not be directly comparable because input reflectance values differ from sensor to sensor due to differences in sensor design and spectral response of the instrument. This is clearly visible in the example shown in Fig. 1. Using the same color scale, panels (a) and (b) show the contemporaneous January 2003 NDVI averages for AVHRR and MODIS, respectively. The differences are particularly evident in the higher northern latitudes. Panel (c) shows the difference in NDVI between AVHRR and MODIS, there are substantial biases present.
Brown et al. (2008) showed how machine learning, in particular, neural networks, can identify and remove differences in sensor design and variable atmospheric contamination from the AVHRR NDVI record in order to match the range and variance of MODIS NDVI without removing the desired signal representing the underlying vegetation dynamics. This is well illustrated by comparing Fig. 1 panels (b) and (d). Panel (b) shows the actual MODIS NDVI for January 2003. Panel (d) shows the estimated MODIS NDVI for January 2003 using AVHRR data and a neural network, they are almost indistinguishable. The neural network has been extremely effective in removing the substantial bias in NDVI between AVHRR and MODIS.
Neural networks are “data transformers,” where the objective is to associate the elements of one set of data to the elements in another. Relationships between the two datasets can be complex and the two datasets may have different statistical distributions. This transformation incorporates additional input data that may account for differences between the two datasets.
Brown et al. (2008) demonstrated the viability of neural networks as a tool to produce a long-term dataset based on AVHRR NDVI that has the data range and statistical distribution of MODIS NDVI. Previous work has shown that the relationship between AVHRR and MODIS NDVI is complex and nonlinear, thus this problem is well suited to neural networks if appropriate inputs can be found. The impact of atmospheric contamination, such as clouds, smoke, pollution, and other aerosols, variations in soil color and exposure through vegetation, and land cover type has a differential effect on AVHRR data as compared to MODIS data. Brown et al. (2008) used overlapping years of observations to train the neural networks.
Remote sensing datasets are the result of a complex interaction between the design of a sensor, the spectral response function, stability in orbit, the processing of the raw data, composting schemes, and post-processing corrections for various atmospheric effects including clouds and aerosols. The interaction between these various elements is often nonlinear and non-additive, where some elements increase the vegetation signal-to-noise ratio (compositing, for example) and others reduce it (clouds and volcanic aerosols). Thus, although many have used simulated data to explore the relationship between AVHRR and MODIS, these techniques are not directly useful in producing a sensor-independent vegetation dataset that can be used by data users in the near term.
There are substantial differences between the processed vegetation data from AVHRR and MODIS. In order to have a long data record that utilizes all available data back to 1981, we must find practical ways of incorporating the AVHRR data into a continuum of observations that include both MODIS and VIIRS. Brown et al. (2008) showed that the TOMS data record on clouds, ozone, and aerosols can be used to identify and remove sensor-specific atmospheric contaminants that differentially affect the NDVI from AVHRR over MODIS. Other sensor-related effects, particularly those of changing BRDF, viewing angle, illumination, and other effects that are not accounted for here, remain important sources of additional variability. Although this analysis has not produced a dataset with identical properties to MODIS, it has demonstrated that a neural net approach can remove most of the atmospheric-related aspects of the differences between the sensors, and match the mean, standard deviation, and range of the two sensors. A similar technique can be used for the VIIRS sensor.
Let us now look at some other examples related to the remote sensing of atmospheric composition.
Space-Based Measurements of HCl Relevant for Ozone Depletion
The magnitude of atmospheric ozone depletion is closely intertwined with the abundance of atmospheric halogens such as chlorine. The main reservoir for atmospheric chlorine compounds is HCl. The peak in stratospheric HCl was reached in the late 1990s. Between 1998 and 2004 the stratospheric loading of HCl was relatively constant, with some month to month fluctuation; this was followed by a more pronounced decrease in HCl since 2004. As can be seen in Figs. 2 and 3, we can use probability distribution functions (PDFs) and scatter diagrams for validation and bias characterization of Aura Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) HCl retrievals. Both these methods allow us to use large statistical samples and do not require correlative measurements to be collocated in space and time.
We can take the difference between the medians of the PDFs as a measure of the inter-instrument bias. This bias is really only significant if it is larger than the atmospheric variability in the Lagrangian region we are considering (i.e., the width of the PDF).
We compared the PDFs for all overlapping Lagrangian regions for a given month. However, we can use a single scatter diagram to compare all the overlaps globally for all the months observed by each pair of instruments (Fig. 3). Such a scatter diagram has the advantage of a huge sample size, it encompasses the entire period that a pair of instruments were making contemporaneous observations. The scatter diagram is intended as a big picture summary for all contemporaneous observations made globally. Figure 4 shows two scatter diagrams for all the contemporaneous observations of HCl made globally by two pairs of instruments. In Fig. 4a we compare ACE and Aura MLS which were making contemporaneous observations between September 2004 and the present. In Fig. 4b we compare HALOE and Aura MLS which were making contemporaneous observations between September 2004 and November 2005.
In the ideal case where we have perfect agreement between two instruments, the slope of the scatter diagram would be 1 and the intercept would be 0. In the case of ACE and Aura, we see there is a slope of 1.08, and for HALOE Aura there is a slope of 0.91 (Fig. 3). It can be seen that solely using the slopes does not do justice to the differences. For example, Fig. 3a shows a much better agreement than Fig. 3b, but the slopes themselves do not reflect this. Figure 3b shows an offset of order 9% near 2 ppbv, whereas Fig. 3a shows maybe 1 or 2% for values near 2 ppbv. The mean absolute value of the differences seems a good indicator of the fits. We also note that in the case of Aura MLS and HALOE, the scatter diagrams do not have a constant slope over the entire range of HCl values, several “wiggles” are present. This means that the inter-instrument biases are spatially and temporally dependent. Neural networks are multi-variate, non-parametric, “learning” algorithms that are ideally suited to learning, and correcting for, such inter-instrument biases.
We have used a neural network with three inputs and one output. The inputs are equivalent PV latitude, potential temperature, and HCl from instrument A. The output is HCl from instrument B. Potential temperature and equivalent latitude are used because they are good markers of the large-scale flow pattern. When we do the training we randomly split our training data set into three portions of 80%, 10%, and 10%. The 80% is used to train the neural network weights. This training is iterative and on each iteration we evaluate the current RMS error of the neural network. The RMS error is calculated by using the second 10% of the data that was not used in the training. We use the RMS error and the way it changes with training iteration (epoch) to determine the convergence of our training. When the training is complete, we use the final 10% as a validation data set. This 10% of the data was randomly chosen and not used in either the training or RMS evaluation. We only use the neural network if the validation scatter diagram, which plots the actual data from validation portion against the neural network estimate, yields a straight line graph with a slope of 1. This is a stringent and independent validation. The validation is global as the data was randomly selected over all temporal and spatial data points available. Several training strategies were examined, the one described included the most species over the longest time period. The neural network algorithm used was a feed-forward back-propagation network with 20 hidden nodes. The training was done by the Levenberg-Marquardt back-propagation algorithm.
Figure 4 shows the results of such a neural network training to learn inter-instrument biases between ACE v2.2, Aura MLS v1 and HALOE v19 HCl. Panels (b) and (d) show an independent validation of the training using a randomly chosen, totally independent, data sample not used in training the neural network. In each case the x axis shows the actual ACE v2.2 HCl (the target). In panels (a) and (b) the y axis is the neural network estimate of ACE v2.2 HCl based on Aura MLS v01 HCl. Panel (a) shows the results using the training data, panel (b) shows the results of the independent validation. In panels (c) and (d) the y axis is the neural network estimate of ACE v2.2 HCl based on HALOE v19 HCl. Panel (c) shows the results using the training data, and panel (d) shows the results of the independent validation. The mapping has removed the bias between the measurements and has also straightened out the “wiggles” seen in Fig. 3.
The bias between the Halogen Occultation Experiment (HALOE) and Aura MLS is greatest above the 525 K (21 km) isentropic surface. The global average mean bias between Aura and the Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment (ACE) for January 2005 was 2% and between Aura MLS and HALOE was 14%. The widths of the PDFs are a measure of the spatial variability and measurement precision. The Aura MLS HCl PDFs are consistently wider than those for ACE and HALOE, this reflects the retrieval uncertainties. The median observation uncertainty for Aura MLS v1.51 HCl is 12%, and the median ACE v2.2 uncertainty is 8%. We also connect Aura MLS HCl with the heritage of HALOE HCl by using neural networks to learn the inter-instrument biases and provide a seamless HCl record from the launch of the Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS) in 1991 to the present (Lary and Aulov, 2008).
HCl and Cly Time Series
Knowledge of the distribution of inorganic chlorine Cly in the stratosphere is needed to attribute changes in stratospheric ozone to changes in halogens, and to assess the realism of chemistry-climate models. However, there are limited direct observations of Cly. Simultaneous measurements of the major inorganic chlorine species are rare. In the upper stratosphere, Cly can be inferred from HCl alone.
Now that we have completely characterized the inter-instrument biases and been able to correct for them we can connect Aura MLS HCl observations to the heritage of HALOE (Lary et al., 2007). This allows us to produce an HCl time series from the launch of UARS in 1991 up to the present. Figure 5 shows HCl time series for six different locations with HCl observations from HALOE, ATMOS, ACE, MkIV and Aura MLS.
The HCl re-calibrations have been used (Fig. 6) to form a long Cly time series and associated uncertainty estimate (typically 0.4 ppbv at 800 K). The uncertainty in the Cly estimate is primarily due to the discrepancy between the different observations of HCl, i.e., the HALOE, Aura MLS, and ACE inter-instrument biases.
A consistent time series of stratospheric Cly from 1991 (Fig. 6) has been formed using available space-borne observations (Lary et al., 2007). Here we used neural networks to inter-calibrate HCl measurements from different instruments, and to estimate Cly from observations of HCl and CH4. These estimates of Cly peaked in the late 1990s and have begun to decline as expected from tropospheric measurements of source gases and troposphere to stratosphere transport times. Furthermore, the estimates of Cly are consistent with calculations based on tracer fractional releases and age of air. The Cly time-series formed here is an important benchmark for models being used to simulate the recovery of the ozone hole. Although there is uncertainty in the estimates of Cly, primarily due to biases in HCl measurements, this uncertainty is small compared with the range of model predictions shown in the 2006 WMO report (Lary et al., 2007). This work was viewed as ground breaking and received three awards as a JCET science highlight, a NASA Aura Mission Science highlight, and as a NASA GSFC Atmospheric Chemistry and Dynamics Branch selected publication.
Bias Correction of MODIS Aerosol Optical Depth
Aerosol and cloud radiative effects remain some of the largest uncertainties in our understanding of climate change. Over the past two decades, observations and retrievals of aerosol characteristics have been conducted from space-based sensors, from airborne instruments, and from ground-based samplers and radiometers. Much effort has been directed at these data sets to collocate observations and retrievals and to compare results. Ideally, when two instruments measure the same aerosol characteristic at the same time, the results should agree within well-understood measurement uncertainties. When inter-instrument biases exist, we would like to explain them theoretically from first principles. One example of this task is the comparison between the aerosol optical depth (AOD) retrieved by the MODerate resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) and the AOD measured by the Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET). While progress has been made in understanding the biases between these two data sets, we still have an imperfect understanding of the root causes.
The MODIS instruments are aboard both the Aqua and Terra satellites, launched on May 4, 2002 and December 18, 1999, respectively. The MODIS instruments collect data over the entire globe in 2 days. The AOD is retrieved using dark target methods in bands at 550, 670, 870, 1240, 1630, and 2130 nm, over ocean, and at 470, 550, and 670 nm over land. Other wavelengths are also used in the retrieval, for instance, short-wave infrared wavelengths for the land algorithm. Previous MODIS aerosol validation studies have compared the Aqua and Terra MODIS-retrieved AOD with the ground-based AERONET observations. AERONET is a global system of ground-based sun and sky scanning sun photometers that measure AOD in various channels, depending on individual instrument, but usually include measurements at 340, 380, 440, 500, 675, 870, and 1020 nm. Measurements are taken every 15 min during daylight hours. AERONET Level 2 quality assured AOD observations are accurate to within 0.01 for wavelengths of 440 nm and higher.
Previous studies concluded that MODIS AOD agreed with AERONET observations to within MODIS expected uncertainties, on a global basis. AERONET is only available for land locations, although some sites are in coastal regions. However, the correlation for the MODIS ocean algorithm was much better than the agreement for the MODIS land algorithm, in the Collection 4 data set. Revision and implementation of a new land algorithm and reprocessing of the data resulted in much improvement to the retrieved MODIS AOD over land. Even so, there remains a small overprediction of the AOD for low values and underprediction at high AOD values.
Data Description
Lary et al. (2009) used the global 10 km MODIS Collection 5 AOD product, over land and ocean, and all the available AERONET version 2.0 data. The AERONET program provides a long-term, continuous, and readily accessible public domain database of aerosol optical properties. The network imposes standardization of instruments, calibration, processing, and distribution. The location of individual sites is available from the AERONET web site http://aeronet.gsfc.nasa.gov/.
Lary et al. (2009) first identified all MODIS overpasses of the AERONET sites throughout the lifetime of the two MODIS missions. Then used the single green band MODIS AOD (550 nm) in the geographic grid point that contains the AERONET site. AERONET AOD measurements within 30 min of the MODIS observation are averaged. AERONET data are interpolated (in log–log space) to the green band where they are missing. They found a strong correlation between geographic location and bias. For example, there is a negative bias (MODIS underestimation relative to AERONET) over vegetated Western Africa (from Liberia to Nigeria) and a positive bias over the Southwestern U.S. The spatial dependence of the differences between AERONET and MODIS is shown in Fig. 7.
Machine Learning AOD Bias Correction
Lary et al. (2009) applied two types of machine learning to the correction of the bias between MODIS and AERONET, i.e., neural networks and support vector machines (SVMs). For each of these machine-learning approaches, they used two training data sets, i.e., one for MODIS Aqua and one for MODIS Terra. These training data sets include all contemporaneous measurements of the MODIS instruments and AERONET made from launch to the present that were within 30 min of each other, within a great circle distance of 0.25∘, and within a solar zenith angle of 0.1∘. For MODIS Aqua, this gave a training record of 7543 points, and for Terra, 13,034 points.
The purpose of training a machine-learning algorithm is to construct a mapping between a set of input variables and an output variable (i.e., a multivariate nonlinear nonparametric fit). For each data set, the inputs were the surface type, the solar zenith angle, the solar azimuth angle, the sensor zenith angle, the sensor azimuth angle, the scattering angle, the reflectance, and the MODIS AOD. For each data set, the output was the AERONET AOD at 550 nm.
Figure 8c and d shows the result of performing a neural network bias correction. We see that the neural network is able to make a substantial improvement in the correlation coefficient with AERONET: an improvement from 0.86 to 0.96 for MODIS Aqua and an improvement from 0.84 to 0.92 for MODIS Terra.
Figure 8e and f shows the result of performing an SVR bias correction. The SVR makes an even greater improvement than the neural network correction, improving the correlation coefficient from 0.86 to 0.99 for MODIS Aqua and from 0.84 to 0.99 for MODIS Terra.
Examining the linear regression on the SVM fit, we see that the intercept (bias) is considerably reduced, from 0.03 to 0.0005 for Aqua and from 0.03 to 0.0001 for Terra. In addition, the slope of the SVM fit is almost 1 (0.99) for both Aqua and Terra.
Overall, the machine-learning results of Lary et al. (2009) (Fig. 8) show us that there is opportunity in the MODIS aerosol algorithm to improve the accuracy of the AOD retrieval, as compared with AERONET, and that this improvement is linked to surface type. We can use information from AERONET, from other satellite sensors such as MISR, and from detailed field experiments to continue to test and refine the assumptions in the MODIS algorithm. The results from the machine-learning analysis that point to surface type as the missing piece of information will allow us to focus the refinement procedure where it will help most.
Machine-learning algorithms were able to effectively adjust the AOD bias seen between the MODIS instruments and AERONET. SVMs performed the best, improving the correlation coefficient between the AERONET AOD and the MODIS AOD from 0.86 to 0.99 for MODIS Aqua and from 0.84 to 0.99 for MODIS Terra. Key in allowing the machine-learning algorithms to “correct” the MODIS bias was provision of the surface type and other ancillary variables that explain the variance between the MODIS and AERONET AOD.
Machine Learning for New Product Creation
Let us know turn our attention to an example of creating new data products through the holistic use of satellite and in situ data. A new data product that is of societal significance.
Airborne Particulates
There is an increasing awareness of the health impacts of particulate matter and a growing need to quantify the spatial and temporal variations of the global abundance of ground level airborne particulate matter (PM2.5). In March 2014, the World Health Organization (WHO) released a report that in 2012 alone, a staggering 7 million people died as a result of air pollution exposure (), one in eight of the total global deaths. A major component of this pollution is airborne particulate matter (e.g., PM2.5 and PM10).
The recent study by Lary et al. (2014) used machine learning to provide daily global estimates of airborne PM2.5 from 1997 to 2014. This was achieved utilizing by using a massive amount of data (40 TB) from a suite of about 100 remote sensing and meteorological data products together with ground based observations of PM2.5 from 8329 measurement sites in 55 countries taken between 1997 and 2014. This data was used to train a machine learning algorithm to estimate the daily distributions of PM2.5 from 1997 to 2014. This allowed the creation of a new global PM2.5 product at 10 km resolution from August 1997 to present (Lary et al., 2014). This new dataset is specifically designed to support health impact studies. Lary et al. (2014) showed some examples of this global PM2.5 dataset and finish by examining a mental health Emergency Room admissions in Baltimore, MD. They demonstrate that the new PM2.5 data product can reliably represent global observations of PM2.5 for epidemiological studies. They showed that airborne particulates can have some surprising associations with health outcomes. As an example of this, Lary et al. (2014) presented an analysis of Baltimore schizophrenia Emergency Room admissions in the context of the levels of ambient pollution. PM2.5 had a statistically significant association with some aspects of mental health.
A useful validation of the new PM2.5 data product is to survey the key features of the global PM2.5 distribution and see if they capture what we expect to find and what has been reported in the literature. In Fig. 9a we see that the eastern half of the USA has a higher average abundance of PM2.5 than the western half of the USA with the exception of California. This is consistent with the overlaid EPA observations shown as color filled circles. The color fill for the observations uses the same color scale as the machine learning estimate depicted using the background colors. There are persistently high levels of PM2.5 in Mexico’s dusty and desolate Baja California Sur. The particularly high values are in Mulegé Municipality close to Guerrero Negro (marked A in panel (a) of Fig. 9). Straddling the region close to the Mexico, Arizona, and California borders is the Sonoran Desert. This is a region characterized by a high average PM2.5 abundance (marked B) and haboobs, massive dust storms. The Sonoran desert has an area of 311,000 square kilometers and is one of the hottest and dustiest parts of North America. This is clearly evident in the high 16-year average PM2.5 abundance in this region. The persistently high PM2.5 abundance associated with Los Angeles is visible (marked C). The regions of high population density usually coincide with the region of high particulate abundance. California’s heavily agricultural Central Valley has a high PM2.5 loading (marked D), note the good agreement of our estimates with the 16 year average observations. The EPA has designated Central Valley as a non-attainment area for the 24-h PM2.5 National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS). The high PM2.5 abundance associated with the Great Salt Lake Desert in northern Utah close to the Nevada border is clearly visible (marked E). There is a nearby measurement supersite at Salt Lake City recording a particulate abundances consistent with our estimates. Mexico City is known for its high levels of particulates and is clearly visible (marked F) as a localized hot spot. Close to the Mexico/Texas border we see the elevated PM2.5 abundance associated with the Chihuahuan Desert and the Big Bend Desert (marked G). Dust storms in this area often impact El Paso in Texas and Ciudad Juarez in Mexico. The Ohio River Valley (marked H) encompasses several states and is home to numerous coal-fired power plants, chemical plants, and industrial facilities, leading to high levels of ambient particulates. The Ohio River Valley has a higher average abundance of PM2.5 than the rest of the East Coast. Our analysis agrees closely with the in-situ observations for the Athens super-site. The Piura desert in Northern Peru (marked I) on the coast and western slopes of the Andes is a region of high particulate abundances. The region in South America from the high Andean semi-arid Altiplano basin in the north, coming down through the Salar de Uyuni Desert (the world’s largest salt flats), passing by Santiago in Chile and San Miguel de Tucumn, San Juan and Mendoza in Argentina, and down to the Neuquén Basin in the south is characterized by a high abundance of particulates from a combination of dust, salt, and pollution (marked J). The southern Amazon in Bolivia and the surrounding region has a lot of burning leading to persistently high particulate abundances (labeled K).
The Bodélé depression is Chad’s lowest point on the Sahara’s southern edge that supplies the Amazon forest with the majority of its mineral dust. The high abundance of PM2.5 over the Bodélé is clearly visible (marked L). Typically there are dust storms originating from the Bodélé depression on around 100 days a year. The low flat desert in the North African Western Sahara is some of the most inhospitable and arid land on earth and a substantial dust source, clearly visible in the high abundance of PM2.5. Burning in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (marked M) leads to high levels of particulates. Much of coastal Somalia is desert characterized by high levels of particulates (marked N).
The Italian Po valley (marked P in Fig. 9) has some of the highest average abundance of particulates in Europe. Industrial emissions coupled with persistent fog leading to heavy smog. High levels of PM2.5 are found in the Netherlands and North-west Germany. An example of a local pollution hotspot in Europe is Moscow (marked O).
Lake Eyre is Australia’s largest lake and lowest point (marked Q). When the lake has dried out a salt crust remains. When Lake Eyre is dry it is typically Australia’s largest dust source, Lake Eyre usually only fills with water after the heavy rains that typically occur once every 3 years, during these periods the PM2.5 abundance in the vicinity of Lake Eyre is lower than usual. Just east of the Lake Eyre Basin is the Strzelecki Desert another major Australian dust source (marked R). The arid region just south of the Hamersley Range in Western Australia, the Gibson Desert, Great Victoria Desert and MacDonnell Ranges are also dusty environments with elevated average abundances of PM2.5.
Asia has some of the highest particulate abundances anywhere on earth. The Aral Sea (marked S) lying across the border of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan is heavily polluted with major public health problems. The Ganges Valley is home to 100 million people and is highly polluted (marked T). The cold Taklimakan Desert of northwest China is a major source of PM2.5 (marked U). Particularly high levels of particulates are found in the Sichuan Basin (marked V) and in western China in the region from Beijing in the North down to Guangxi in the south (marked W).
Tracer Correlations
The spatial distributions of atmospheric trace constituents are in general dependent on both chemistry and transport. Compact correlations between long-lived species are well observed features in the middle atmosphere. The correlations exist for all long-lived tracers—not just those which are chemically related—due to their transport by the general circulation of the atmosphere. The tight relationships between different constituents have led to many analyses where measurements of one tracer are used to infer the abundance of another tracer. These correlations can also be used as a diagnostic of mixing and to distinguish between air-parcels of different origins.
Of special interest are the so-called “long-lived tracers”: constituents such as nitrous oxide (N2O), methane (CH4), and the chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) that have long lifetimes (many years) in the troposphere and lower stratosphere, but are destroyed rapidly in the middle and upper stratosphere.
The correlations are spatially and temporally dependent. For example, there is a compact-relation regime in the lower part of the stratosphere and an altitude-dependent regime above this. In the compact-relation region, the abundance of one tracer is uniquely determined by the value of the other tracer, without regard to other variables such as latitude or altitude. In the altitude-dependent regime, the correlation generally shows significant variation with altitude.
The description of such spatially and temporally dependent correlations is usually achieved by a family of correlations. However, a single neural network is a natural and effective alternative.
Reconstructing CH4–N2O Correlations
The motivation for this study was preparation for a long-term chemical assimilation of Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS) data starting in 1991. For this period we have continuous version 19 data from the Halogen Occultation Experiment (HALOE) but not observations of N2O as both ISAMS and CLAES failed. In addition we would like to constrain the total amount of reactive nitrogen, chlorine, and bromine in a self-consistent way (i.e., the correlations between the long-lived tracers are preserved). Tracer correlations provide a means to do this by using HALOE CH4 observations.
Figure 10a shows the CH4–N2O correlation from the Cambridge 2D model overlaid with a neural network fit to the correlation (Lary et al., 2003). The neural network used was a feed-forward multilayer perceptron. There were four inputs, one output, and one hidden layer with eight nodes. A non-linear activation function was used. The training dataset contained 1292 patterns, sampling the input space completely as shown in Fig. 10. The network was constrained for 106 epochs (iterations).
The correlation coefficient between the actual solution and the neural network solution was 0.9995. Figure 10 panel (b) shows how the median fractional error of the neural network decreases with epoch (iteration). Both CH4 and pressure are strongly correlated with N2O as can be seen in panels (c) and (d). Latitude and time are only weakly correlated with N2O as can be seen in panels (e) and (f). Even though the correlation with time of year and latitude is relatively weak it still does play a role in capturing some of the details of the CH4–N2O correlation in Panel (a).
A polynomial or other fit will typically do a good job of describing the CH4–N2O correlation for high values of CH4 and N2O. However, for low values of CH4 and N2O there is quite a spread in the relationship which a single curve can not describe. This is the altitude dependent regime where the correlation shows significant variation with altitude.
Figure 10c shows a more conventional fit using a Chebyshev polynomial of order 20. This fit was chosen as giving the best agreement to the CH4–N2O correlation after performing fits using 3667 different equations. Even though this is a good fit the spread of values cannot be described by a single curve. However, a neural network trained with the latitude, pressure, time of year, and CH4 volume mixing ratio (v.m.r.) (four inputs) is able to well reproduce the N2O v.m.r. (one output), including the spread for low values of CH4 and N2O.
Variable scaling often allows neural networks to achieve better results. In this case all variables were scaled to vary between zero and one. If the initial range of values was more than an order of magnitude, then log scaling was also applied. In the case of time of year the sine of the fractional time of year was used to avoid a step discontinuity at the start of the year.
Neural networks are clearly ideally suited to describe the spatial and temporal dependence of tracer-tracer correlations (Lary et al., 2003). Even in regions when the correlations are less compact. Useful insight can be gained into the relative roles of the input variables from visualizing the network weight assignment.
Pollen Estimation
Pollen is known to be a trigger for allergic diseases, e.g. asthma, hay fever, and allergic rhinitis (Oswalt and Marshall, 2008; Howard and Levetin, 2014). It is interesting that a variety of non-respiratory issues such as strokes (Low et al., 2006), and surprisingly, even suicide and attempted suicide (Matheson et al., 2008) have an association with the daily concentration of atmospheric particulates. However, so far, there is no defined threshold amount of pollen known to trigger allergy for sensitive individuals (Voukantsis et al., 2010). One of the factors for the lack of knowledge of the threshold amount of pollen is the absence of an accurate estimation on a fine spatial scale of the hourly, bi-hourly, or daily amount of pollen. Individual physiological differences such as gender and age among sensitive people also adversely affect in knowing the threshold amount of pollen in the surrounding (Britton et al., 1994; Ernst et al., 2002).
Of all plants, weeds, and particularly those of the Ambrosia species, e.g. Ambrosia artemisiifolia (common ragweed), Ambrosia trifida (giant ragweed) are major producers of large amounts of pollen. For example, a common ragweed can produce up to about 2.5 billion pollen grains per plant per day (Laaidi et al., 2003). Ambrosia artemisiifolia and Ambrosia trifida combined can produce more allergens than all other plants combined (Lewis et al., 1983). Grasses (e.g., rye grass) are also known to trigger an allergic response. Following Ambrosia artemisiifolia, grass pollen are known for their high allergic potency than most weeds (Esch et al., 2001; Lewis et al., 1983). Tree pollen can cause an allergic response, but one that is typically less than that of weeds and grasses, although in some regions tree pollen can trigger a significant allergic response. For instance, the airborne concentration of Mountain cedar pollen grains can reach tens of thousand of pollen grains per cubic meter and trigger a significant allergic response in central Texas during winter, known as cedar fever (Andrews et al., 2013; Ramirez, 1984).
Both global climate change and air pollution affect the abundance of airborne pollen, and consequently, its allergic impact (Kinney, 2008; Wayne et al., 2002; Voukantsis et al., 2010). For example, the abundance of pollutants such as CO2, Wayne et al. (2002) and NO2 (Zhao et al., 2016) can affect the extent of growing season of major pollen producing plants, and thereby also affect the airborne pollen concentration as well as altering the onset and end dates of seasonal allergies. Overall, more people are exposed to pollen and sensitive individuals become exposed to large amount of pollen for longer period of time over larger areas.
Globally millions of people are affected by seasonal allergies, and the number of people affected is increasing each year. In North American alone, as of 2008, about 50 million adult Americans and 9% of children aged below 18 have experienced pollen caused allergies (Howard and Levetin, 2014). Similarly, in Europe about 15 million people are affected by hay fever, asthma, and rhinitis (D’amato and Spieksma, 1991). Hence, pollen allergies are becoming an increasingly significant environmental health issue. Hence, just as accurate daily weather forecasts are of significant use, accurate daily pollen forecasts are likely to become increasingly important.
Remote Sensing has been employed to study atmospheric pollen concentrations. For example, the polarization of LIDARs has been used to observe the airborne tree pollen abundance at Fairbanks Alaska (Sassen, 2008). In this case, the pollen produces a depolarization of the LIDAR backscattering signals from the lower atmosphere. The light scattering properties of pollen are also manifested in the shape of the solar corona they create. The shape of the solar corona associated with pollen depends on the shape of the pollen grains and their atmospheric concentration (Tränkle and Mielke, 1994). However, this approach can be complicated as atmospheric light scattering is also caused by other airborne particulates.
Common pollen estimation techniques, particularly those made in Europe, stress the importance of meteorologic variables (Kasprzyk, 2008). Usually forecasting the amount of airborne pollen is based on the interaction of atmospheric weather and pollen (Arizmendi et al., 1993). Meteorologic variables such as the daily mean, maximum, change in temperature and dew point variables show positive correlation with the pollen concentration (Kasprzyk, 2008). Kasprzyk (2008) found that atmospheric humidity shows negative correlation to the pollen concentration. Other studies show that temperature, precipitation, and wind speed are significant meteorologic parameters in estimating pollen concentration (Stark et al., 1997).
Most of these meteorologic variable based forecasting methods employed statistical methods such as linear regression, the polynomial method and time serious analysis (Sánchez-Mesa et al., 2002). Only few studies used advanced machine learning methods such as neural network (Sánchez-Mesa et al., 2002; Rodríguez-Rajo et al., 2010; Puc, 2012; Voukantsis et al., 2010) and random forest (Nowosad, 2016) for pollen forecasting and support vector machines are applied for related environmental studies (Voukantsis et al., 2010; Osowski and Garanty, 2007).
Predicting Pollen Abundance
Over the past decade neural networks have been applied to study pollen of different species over the European region. For example, Csépe et al. (2014) used different Computational Intelligence (CI) methods to predict the Ambrosia pollen at two different places in Hungary and France. Castellano-Méndez et al. (2005) and Puc (2012) have employed the neural network to predict Betula pollen over Spain and Poland, respectively. Recently, Nowosad (2016) used the random forest method to forecast different tree pollen species.
In this study we used random forests, neural networks, and support vector machines to estimate daily Ambrosia pollen concentration at Tulsa, Oklahoma (location: 36.1511∘N, 95.9446∘W). We used a combination of environmental parameters and NEXRAD radar measurements. The combined parameters are listed in Table 1. The daily pollen concentration used in the training of our machine learning algorithms was obtained using a Burkhard spore trap at the University of Tulsa, Oklahoma.
After pollen is produced in the plant anthers its emission dispersion and deposition is influenced by meteorological variables such as the temperature, wind speed, and direction and pressure (Kasprzyk, 2008; Csépe et al., 2014; Howard and Levetin, 2014). Other meteorologic parameters such as dew point, humidity, rainfall sunshine duration are also known to affect pollen emission and distribution (Kasprzyk, 2008).
We used a set of environmental and NEXRAD radar parameters (Table 1) in our machine learning training. Environmental parameters such as vegetation greenness fraction, roughness length (sensible heat), energy stored in all land reservoirs, and displacement height and leaf area index are selected. The other set of data we used are the NEXRAD measurements which consist of the reflectivity, Doppler velocity, and spectral width which represent, respectively, the amount of back scattered signals from a scattering volume, the velocity of the scatterer along the radar line of sight and the width of the power spectrum. All NEXRAD measurements are taken at the lowest elevation. Additionally the NEXRAD provides measurements of the vertical profile of the direction and speed of the wind from about near the surface of the Earth. The dual polarization measurements: differential reflectivity, differential phase, and correlation coefficient use the horizontal and vertical polarization signals and are particularly suited for particle identification. In this study we do not use the dual polarization (polarimetric) NEXTRAD measurements as we have only few days of the measurements in contrary to the ideal high dimensional data requirement for machine learning.
The three machine learning methods were trained on the entire data set to assess their performance in predicting the Ambrosia pollen. The scatter diagrams are shown in Fig. 11. We also used a Newton-Raphson based recursive Random Forest technique that has been developed in order to improve the accuracy. The method includes error estimation and correction. In order to evaluate the performance of the machine learning methods independently, 10% of the data are randomly selected and withdrawn for validation from the training and the remaining 90% of the data is then used for training the model. After developing the model, its performance is tested using the independent 10% of the validation dataset that was not used in training the machine learning regression. These results are shown in Fig. 11. Panels (a)–(c) in Fig. 11 show scatter plots of prediction made by the support vector machine, neural network, and random forest machine learning methods, respectively, using the training data (black circles) and the validation data (red squares). Results of the iterative method applied to the random forest method are given by panels (d)–(f). The random forest machine learning is trained using 200 decision trees.
From the top three panels of Fig. 11, we observe that the neural network and random forest methods produced better predictions than the Support Vector machine. The random forest method produced the best independent validation results (correlation coefficient, 0.62) of all the three methods. The high correlation value of neural network found using the training data (correlation coefficient 0.99) is not reproduced in the independent validation test which had a correlation coefficient of only 0.46. Error bar plots for the training and the validation data for the first iteration of the random forest are given by panel (d) in Fig. 11. We see that predictions using both the training and validation data exhibit large errors and a low correlation coefficient. Interestingly, after a few iterations the random forest produced results with significantly reduced errors and correlation values close to 1 (panel (e) in Fig. 11). Panel (f) in Fig. 11 shows the correlation coefficient values between the normalized estimated and actual pollen for the training (blue curve) and validation data (red curve) sets for 10 iterations. We observe that the iterative of the random forest method has reduced the error significantly and the correlation coefficient values converge to one for both training and validation data sets.
The upper panel of Fig. 12 shows a comparison of the actual and predicted pollen using the recursive random forest. Another important application of machine learning methods is the selection of the best features (variables) that contribute most to the prediction and ranking them in order of the importance. In this way we can determine the most important predictor variables and estimate the output leaving features that contribute less. The random forest provides such a ranking based on criteria attributed to the splitting variable in the data sampling to form decision tree (Genuer et al., 2010; Kotsiantis et al., 2007; Friedman et al., 2001).
The lower panel of Fig. 12 shows the ranking of the relative importance of the variables provided by the random forest with 200 trees. The most important factors in estimating the pollen were the leaf area index, vegetation greenness function, and displacement height.
Using Machine Learning for Ocean Data Products
Let us take a look at using machine learning to estimate chromophoric dissolved organic material (CDOM) absorption. A quality control database has recently been assembled (Aurin and Mannino, 2012) of optical and biogeochemical parameters suitable for supporting the development of ocean color algorithms to retrieve chromophoric dissolved organic material (CDOM) absorption (a g), CDOM spectral slope (S g), and Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC) from satellite-derived, multi-spectral remote sensing reflection (Aurin and Mannino, 2012). This database of sea-surface CDOM is considerably larger (18,035 stations) than NOMADv2 (a subset of SeaBASS that is often used in algorithm development; 1182 stations) with valid satellite matches at 8654 stations. In the process, estimation of S g at multiple wavebands between 245 and 715 nm was found to be insensitive to the spectral resolution of a g, but did depend on reference waveband selection. Global distributions of a g and S g are analyzed for patterns related to source, composition, and photo-degradation of CDOM.
CDOM absorbs light most strongly in the ultraviolet and blue region of the spectrum. Non-turbid waters with no CDOM appear blue and as the CDOM concentration increases the color of the water will change from green, through yellow-green to brown. The increasing levels of CDOM diminish light penetration and hence affect the biological activity of aquatic systems by limiting photosynthesis and inhibiting the growth of phytoplankton. CDOM also helps protect organisms from DNA damage by absorbing the harmful UVA and UVB radiation.
Figure 14 shows the global CDOM estimate obtained when the Random Forest multivariate non-parametric fit is used together with a global 9 km SeaWIFS Mapped Seasonal multi-wavelength radiances. The CDOM distribution shown in Fig. 14 is realistic, with low CDOM in regions such as the South Atlantic and South Pacific Gyres, and high CDOM in freshwater and in coastal areas with river outflows.
CDOM abundance is variable, typically with the lower abundances in the open ocean and higher abundances in fresh waters and estuaries. The database (Aurin and Mannino, 2012) was used together with machine learning to develop a set of algorithms to estimate a g and S g based on the multi-wavelength remote sensing reflectance observed by SeaWIFS, MODIS Aqua, and MODIS Terra.
Inputs
The training dataset used provides training examples to learn from of the multi-wavelength radiances observed by the satellite and of the corresponding ocean parameters such as CDOM. For SeaWIFS the wavelengths used are 412, 443, 490, 510, 555, and 670 nm. For MODIS Terra and Aqua the wavelengths used are 412, 443, 488, 531, 547, and 667 nm. In this study we only consider training examples that were made by the satellites at zenith angles of less than 60∘, within 3 h of the in-situ observations, and with a coefficient of variability of less than 0.15.
Fit Quality
Figure 13a shows in blue a scatter diagram of the training SeaWIFS CDOM values on the x-axis versus the random forest estimates on the y-axis. The red points show the independent validation dataset. There is a good clustering around the 1:1 line shown in green. The training provides a good fit with an R 2 value of 0.91. The independent verification with the validation dataset has an R 2 value of 0.72 (Table 2). Figure 13b shows the corresponding Taylor diagram, point A is the training observations, point B is the Random Forest fit.
A very useful feature of Random Forests is that they can provide a ranked list of the relative importance of the variables used in producing the regression. This is done by looking at the increase in the mean squared error averaged over all the trees in the ensemble and divided by the standard deviation taken over the trees, for each variable. The larger this value, the more important the variable is in producing a good quality fit. Figure 13c shows the relative importance of the Random Forest inputs. It indicates that in estimating CDOM at 412 nm using SeaWIFS the order of importance of the radiances are 412 nm > 555 nm > 443 nm > 670 nm > 490 nm > 510 nm.
Example Global Distribution
Figure 14 shows the global CDOM estimate obtained when the Random Forest multivariate non-parametric fit is used together with a global 9 km SeaWIFS Mapped Seasonal multi-wavelength radiances. The CDOM distribution shown in Fig. 14 is realistic, with low CDOM in regions such as the South Atlantic and South Pacific Gyres, and high CDOM in freshwater and in coastal areas with river outflows.
Dust Source Identification Using Unsupervised Classification
Unsupervised classification can be very useful when we would like to objectively split up our data into different regimes. A good example of this is a study to characterize dust sources (e.g., Fig. 15) (Lary et al., 2016).
Dust sources of many kinds are found globally. One of the most salient features of dust sources is that they are often very localized. For example, in Figs. 15 and 17 we can clearly see that the source of the dust plumes is best described as an ensemble of many point sources, not broad dust emitting regions. Realistically capturing this very localized nature of dust sources has so far largely eluded automated diagnosis, and consequently, description in global models. Invariably current models describe dust sources as rather large scale features, even when vegetation indices and similar approaches are used. This is in marked contrast to what we consistently see in the satellite imagery across the planet (e.g., Figs. 15 and 17).
Identifying dust sources is a critical yet challenging task for the accurate simulation of atmospheric particulate distributions relevant to air quality and climate change.
We take a new and radically different approach to any previous studies that have sought to identify global dust sources on a routine basis. We demonstrate that this new approach employing machine learning is very effective. The approach uses multi-wavelength spectral reflectivity signatures to characterize land surfaces, naturally paving the way for a new class of algorithm ideally suited to fully exploit the next generation of hyper-spectral instrument. The production of thematic maps, such as those depicting land cover, using an image classification is one of the most common applications of remote sensing. New in our approach is that we can both operate at very high spatial resolution and distinguish between types of dust sources. For example, we can easily distinguish between the edge of salt flats (Fig. 17), dried up wadis or lakes, and agricultural sources to name just three of many examples. The only limiting factor for the resolution is the resolution of the satellite imagery.
We employ machine learning to objectively provide an unsupervised multi-variate and non-linear classification into a very large number of surface types (in our demonstration study presented below 1000 classes are used) using multi-spectral satellite data. In other words, we do not impose any a priori assumptions, but rather, we let the data speak for itself as to how we should classify surface types. Self-organizing maps (SOMs) are a data visualization and unsupervised classification technique invented by Professor Teuvo Kohonen that reduce the dimensions of data through the use of self-organizing neural networks.
SOMs help us address the issue that humans simply cannot visualize high dimensional data unaided. The way SOMs go about reducing dimensionality is by producing a feature map, usually with two dimensions, that objectively plots the similarities of the data by grouping similar data items together. SOMs learn to classify input vectors according to how they are grouped in the input space. The SOM learns to recognize neighboring sections of the input space. Thus, SOMs learn both the distribution and topology of the input vectors they are trained on. This approach allows SOMs to display similarities and reduce the dimensionality. A SOM does not assume a priori a functional form for the analyzed data. A noteworthy enhancement of an SOM over principal component analysis is an SOM’s ability to represent non-linear functions or mappings.
The premise being that there are very many types of dust sources, from the diatom rich sediments of the Bodélé depression in Chad, to those at the edge of salt flats in Bolivia and Chile (Fig. 17), to those in the coastal Green Mountains of Libya. Each of these dust sources has distinct physical characteristics, and therefore a distinct reflectance signature. If we are able to identify these signatures, then we can map the temporal and spatial evolution of each of these distinct dust sources. Once we have the surface type classification we then seek to identify which small subset of surface classes correspond to various kinds of dust sources. Once we have identified the signature of a wide variety of dust sources we can precisely pick out these locations globally and how their distribution changes with time. This is particularly useful as dust sources are very localized, and some dust sources have a significant seasonal time evolution. Having a methodology to identify the signature of these small-scale regions is invaluable.
The machine learning approach to dust source identification was first conceived in 2010 to face a very practical challenge that the Navy has in producing real time visibility forecasts. If the standard type of dust sources are used it was found that very poor regional visibility forecasts result. However, the quality of the Navy visibility forecasts drastically improved with an analyst (Annette Walker) manually identifying individual dust sources at the heads of plumes by examining sequences of satellite images such as those shown in Fig. 17 and also the EUMETSAT RGB Composites Dust images available online (http://oiswww.eumetsat.org/IPPS/html/MSG/RGB/DUST/). This methodology is very labor intensive and does not lend itself to easy automation. The first prototype dust sources using the machine learning approach described here were devised specifically to automate the dust source identification and also allow for the accurate diagnosis of the time evolution in the spatial extent of the dust sources. Beyond the applications of accurate dust sources for visibility and air quality forecasts, the radiative forcing (RF) due to dust is a key concept in climate change calculations considered by the IPCC for the quantitative comparison of the strength of different human and natural agents causing climate change. Radiative forcing can be categorized into direct and indirect effects. A significant part of the direct effect is the mechanism by which aerosols scatter and absorb shortwave and longwave radiation, thereby altering the radiative balance of the Earth—atmosphere system. Mineral dust is a major component of global aerosols that exert a significant direct radiative forcing. Mineral dust aerosols are produced both naturally ( ≈70%) and anthropogenically ( ≈30%).
Our ultimate goal is to identify all the surface locations on the planet that are dust sources. To do this we use a SOM to classify all the land surface locations into a very large set of n categories. In the examples shown here, n = 1000. A small subset of these 1000 categories will be regions that are dust sources. Naturally, there are a variety of distinct types of dust sources (e.g., dry river beds, agricultural sources, edge of salt flats, etc.) that we would like to delineate.
To achieve a comprehensive classification we want to consider the conditions present throughout the year, so in the demonstration we took an entire year of the 0.05∘ resolution MCD43C3 data product (Fig. 16). For this entire year of data, we then calculate the mean, μ for each grid point. This is a massive dataset, and the computational time and memory required to perform the SOM classification increases with the number of data records. For the examples shown here we therefore first restricted our attention to those broad MODIS surface types that may include dust sources, namely: barren or sparsely vegetated surfaces, croplands, grasslands, and open and closed shrublands. These are MODIS surface types 16, 12, 10, 7, and 6, respectively. For each of these surface types we then constructed an input vector that contains seven values, namely for each of the seven bands provided in the MCD43C3 MODIS product the mean, μ, of the directional and bihemispherical reflectance. When training the SOM we use the Euclidean distance to compare the input vectors (each containing seven values).
In order to provide a fine gradation of classification we use the SOM to group together the surface locations into 1000 classes, only a small subset of which correspond to regions that are dust sources. Once the classes that correspond to dust sources have been successfully identified, we have an automated method with which we can identify dust sources that can be routinely executed to provide a regular dust source data product that captures the spatial and temporal evolution of dust sources globally. We utilized the extensive hand classification of very localized dust sources produced by the Navy for the Middle East and South West Asia to guide our initial determination of which of the 1000 classes are dust sources. It is worth noting that the SOM classes are unique and distinct, this will be seen below with the example of the Bodélé Depression. Classes near each other are similar, but distinct.
Bolivia and Chile Salt Flats Dust Event
Figure 17 shows the dust event of July 18, 2010 in the Bolivian Altiplano. This event can be seen clearly in the MODIS Aqua True Color image where dust plumes emanate from fluvio-lacustine deposits and fluviodeltaic sediments around the Salars de Coipasa and Uyuni, Lake Poopo, and other smaller salt flats and lakes. Overlaid are the SOM classes that coincide with active dust sources on the Altiplano. Notice that the salt flats themselves are not dust sources, rather we see the plumes forming around the edges of the flats and lakes. SOMs are very successful in identifying the unique spectral signatures of dust sources. A set of papers which is in preparation will be describing an exhaustive atlas of the global dust sources.
Bodélé Depression Dust Event
Figure 18 shows the Bodélé depression dust event of January 9, 2011 at 09Z that started at 7Z and ceased at 18Z. The Bodélé depression is Chad’s lowest point on the Sahara’s southern edge. Typically there are dust storms originating from the Bodélé depression on around 100 days a year that supplies the Amazon forest with the majority of its mineral dust (Washington and Todd, 2005; Koren et al., 2006; Washington et al., 2006; Todd et al., 2005; Bouet et al., 2005). The right panel shows the NRL processed EUMETSAT MSG/RGB satellite product. The two left panels show the dust sources identified by our approach with (lower) and without (upper) SOM class 137. The SOM had automatically determined that the sediment in the Bodélé depression was distinct from the surrounding dust sources and put it in a class all of its own, class 137. Indeed it is different, the Bodélé depression was once filled with a freshwater lake that has long since dried up (Washington et al., 2005). This has left behind diatoms that now make up the surface of the depression. The two key points being, first that the dust source of the Bodélé is distinct from the surrounding dust sources, and second, that it consists of diatoms. This is interesting as if we could devise a way of distinguishing dust sources with containing certain biological materials it would have significant applications for public health issues.
Characterizing Pelagic Habitats Within Coastal Waters
Commercial and recreational fisheries within the Gulf of Mexico contribute significantly to the region’s ocean economy making effective management a priority. The goal of fisheries management is to optimize the benefits of living marine resources by addressing threats to a resources’ sustainability through conservation, development, and full utilization of the fishery resources to provide food, employment, income, and recreation. Therefore, it is desirable to minimize management actions that may result in negative impacts on fishermen and the coastal community. However, depending on the source of the threat, some management actions such as implementing fishing gear restrictions, time and area closures, and harvest limits, may have direct adverse impacts on fishermen. Often issues impacting fisheries populations arise from degradation or loss of habitat, requiring a different management approach. Coastal and marine habitats can be significantly and rapidly impacted by a number of anthropogenic actions and natural events such as coastal storms, development and hydrological alterations. With approximately 98% of Gulf of Mexico fisheries dependent on estuarine and near-shore habitats at some point in their life cycle (Lellis-Dibble et al., 2008), it is critical that resource managers have the ability to quickly and frequently monitor and assess habitat loss and degradation. However, inconsistencies in the approach that various agencies use for naming habitats make it difficult to develop a region-wide habitat map without standardizing the information.
Unlike most habitat classification systems currently in use, the Coastal and Marine Ecological Classification Standard (CMECS) (Committee et al., 2012) has a water column component which identifies key classifiers required to characterize pelagic habitat types. The vastness and dynamic nature of the ocean’s water column limit the feasibility of the frequent in situ sampling that would be necessary to monitor these classifiers and routinely produce region-wide map products. Our ultimate goal is to provide an example of how the Machine Learning classification manifests automatically to the physical classification schemes such as CMECS. Alternatives to in-situ sampling such as remote sensing classification offer a proxy for these classifiers, the environmental forcing functions, which shape and determine habitat suitability.
We have used machine learning to objectively provide a water classification of the US Gulf of Mexico using a suite of ocean data products. The unsupervised classification algorithm employed was a self-organizing map (SOM). We used SOM to reduce the dimensionality of the data set. We applied the SOM to identify the multivariate signatures of similar waters and to study the spatial and temporal trends of individual classes over a 5-year period. The input data employed was the sea surface temperature, the chlorophyll concentration, the sea surface salinity, the euphotic depth, and the difference between the sea-bottom and sea-surface temperatures. The output of the analysis is a comprehensive low-dimensional map of US Gulf of Mexico region. This may aid the decision making for the essential habitat zones for conservation and commercial purposes.
The result of the self-organizing map classification is summarized by color-coded maps as shown in Figs. 19 and 21. The SOM essentially group together similar regions as it picks out the characteristic signatures from the data. The similar colors represent the water classified by the method to be on the same class where as the different colors represent the different classification as depicted by the data signatures. Here, the dimension is essentially reduced from 5 to 1. For each SOM class we have computed the spatial extent in square km and how this varies with time. In the time series the annual and biannual signals are clearly evident. A good example of a clear annual cycle in the areal extent is Class 4 in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico. A good example of a clear biannual cycle in the areal extent is Class 61 in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico. Figure 20 shows examples using two SOM classes and the corresponding percentile distributions to the CMECS nomenclatures (Fig. 21).
The dynamics of the region dictates that the characteristics of water should change over the course of the year. In order to study such effects, we computed the areal extent of each of the SOM classes for each month over the 5-year period. By plotting the area of each SOM class as a function of time, we can clearly see the annual and bi-annual cycles in the GOM waters. Characteristic to their SOM class, the areas of the classes change depending upon the time of the year. This gives rise to a time series. The pattern repeats itself over the 5-year period. By using Fourier analysis we have identified the frequency distribution of the time series. Figure 22 shows two example SOM classes for the central Gulf of Mexico. We have computed the area of the SOM classes for each month for each class for all regions.
Class 61 lies in the near-shore region and has a clear bi-annual cycle. The areal extent of this class is greatest in April and October, and least in January. Similarly, SOM class 4, which lies in the offshore region, shows a clear annual cycle. The area of class 4 has a maximum during the summer months and has a minimum during the winter months.
Fish Catch and SOM Classes
The classes within the Self-organized Maps appear to correlate with fish counts. Figure 23 shows SEAMAPFootnote 8 fish count data for the western and central portions of the Gulf of Mexico in June 2006. The fish data are clearly clustered within classes 12–26. Those same classes dominate the SOM for June 2006. Further examination indicates that sea surface temperature is the driving factor for the dominant classes, with euphotic depth appearing to be the secondary driver.
Some Likely Future Machine Learning Applications
Two recent advances are likely to open up a large number of new applications. First the improvement, size reduction and cost reduction of hyper-spectral imagery, and secondly, small embedded (credit card sized) GPU systems such as the NVIDIA Jetson TX1 with its 256 GPU cores.
Hyper-Spectral Imaging and Machine Learning for Real Time Embedded Processing and Decision Support
So what is Hyperspectral Imaging? The human eye perceives the color of visible light in three bands using the cones, the photoreceptor cells in the retina (Fig. 24). These three bands are red (centered on 564 nm), green (centered on 534 nm), and blue (centered on 420 nm). By contrast, instead of using just three broad bands, hyperspectral cameras divide the spectrum into a very large number of narrow bands. Sometimes as many as two to four hundred bands are used to create a hyperspectral datacube (Fig. 25). This technique of dividing images into bands can extend beyond the visible, into both the infrared and thermal infrared, and into the ultraviolet.
Hyperspectral imaging systems are used around the world in a variety of medical, laboratory, industrial, agricultural, and airborne applications. To illustrate the broader significance, let us briefly review just some of these (Fig. 27). Hyperspectral imaging (HSI) is used in various medical applications, especially in disease diagnosis and image-guided surgery. The disease diagnosis applications (e.g., skin examination) naturally lend themselves to telemedicine applications for rural communities where the network connectivity can drastically improve rural community medical care. For each snapshot in time, HSI acquires a three-dimensional dataset called a hypercube (Fig. 25), with two spatial dimensions (just like a regular camera) and one spectral dimension, there is a separate collocated image/layer for each wavelength band (Fig. 24).
Spatially resolved spectral imaging obtained by HSI can provide diagnostic information about the tissue physiology, morphology, and composition. With the advantage of acquiring two-dimensional images across a wide range of electromagnetic spectrum, HSI has been applied to numerous areas, including archaeology and art conservation (Angeletti et al., 2005; Liang, 2012), vegetation and water resource control (Govender et al., 2007), food quality and safety control (Gowen et al., 2007; Feng and Sun, 2012), forensic medicine (Malkoff and Oliver, 2000; Edelman et al., 2012), crime scene detection (Muller et al., 2003), biomedicine (Afromowitz et al., 1988; Carrasco et al., 2003), agriculture, security and defense, thin films, etc.
Figure 27 shows some of the many HSI applications. For example: Using an airborne HSI, an invasive weed (“leafy spurge”, Euphorbia esula) infestation could be clearly identified (Jay et al., 2010), and a weed coverage map generated (Fig. 27a). A study of seed germination (Nansen et al., 2015) using HSI showed that although viable and nonviable seeds appear identical to the human eye they can be clearly distinguished using full reflectance spectra (Fig. 27b). Analysis of wound healing (La Fontaine et al., 2014) (Fig. 27c). Mapping hydrological formations (Fig. 27d). Fluorescent dye imaging (Fig. 27e). Examining the effect of surface pollution (Keith et al., 2009; Spangler et al., 2010) from leaking pipelines on vegetation (Fig. 27f). Checking food quality and fruit bruising (Fig. 27g). Classification of walnuts and shells (Fig. 27h). Automated analysis of cooked meats (Fig. 27i).
This diversity of examples demonstrates the general usefulness and applicability of HSI in a very broad range of contexts. In research, health, agriculture, industry, and more. We already saw in Sect. 3.4 that combining the spectral signature in just seven wavelengths with machine learning was invaluable in uniquely identifying global dust sources with remarkable accuracy. So it can readily be seen that using more detailed hyper-spectral signatures with on-board embedded processing can provide incredibly powerful insights in a very compact package. Figure 26 shows an example of some hyperspectral imagery we obtained using our aerial vehicles (Ramirez, 2015). This approach is useful for many applications in smart agriculture, land surface classification, petrochemical surveying, disaster response (such as oil spills), etc. Let us take a closer look at the example of oil spill response.
Oil Spills
The National Academy of Sciences estimates 1.7–8.8 million tons of oil are released into global waters every year. More than 70% of this release is related to human activities. The effects of these spills include dead wildlife, oil covered marshlands and contaminated water (Fingas and Brown, 1997; Fingas, 2010; Liu et al., 2013; Cornwall, 2015). Spills of national significance (SONS), such as Deepwater Horizon (DWH), challenge response capabilities. In such large spills, optimizing a coordinated response is a challenge. There are always competing mission needs for aerial response resources such as helicopters and observer aircraft. Wildlife reconnaissance, oil observation overflights and targeting chemical dispersant application are a few examples. If we consider just one aspect, i.e. the spill itself, the challenges include both characterizing the continual temporal and spatial evolution of the spill extent, and the evolution of the oil itself as it weathers and emulsifies. Characterizing the oil spill can be made even more challenging due to the variable spill illumination and the weather. Trained observers are required, and their deployment needs can include a wide area, which is also challenging. Further, what is the optimal flight path(s) that should be used by the observers on each deployment to best meet the current needs and anticipate the future evolution of the oil spill to put in place any required preemptive measures or contingencies, such as shoreline pre-cleaning or protective boom deployment? During the DWH oil spill operational trajectory forecasting, maps of key areas for aerial observations to improve trajectory modeling were produced daily by NOAA for the overflight teams (Fig. 27).
The DWH oil spill and the associated impact monitoring was aided by extensive airborne and space-borne passive and active remote sensing (Fingas and Brown, 1997; Leifer et al., 2012; Liu et al., 2013; Fingas and Brown, 2014). A good review of these remote sensing activities is provided by (Leifer et al., 2012). During DWH, remote sensing was used to derive oil thickness (see Fig. 28) quantitatively for thick ( > 0.1 mm) slicks from AVIRIS (Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer) that measured 224 contiguous spectral bands with wavelengths from 400 to 2,500 nanometers (nm) using a spectral library approach based on the shape and depth of near infrared spectral absorption features (Kokaly et al., 2013; Leifer et al., 2012). MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) satellite, visible-spectrum broadband data of surface-slick modulation of sunglint reflection allowed extrapolation to the total slick. A multispectral expert system used a neural network approach to provide Rapid Response thickness class maps (Sveykovsky and Muskat, 2006; Svejkovsky et al., 2009).
Airborne and satellite synthetic aperture radar (SAR) provides synoptic data under all-sky conditions (Liu et al., 2011; Leifer et al., 2012); however, SAR generally cannot discriminate thick ( > 100 μm) oil slicks from thin sheens (to 0.1 μm). The UAVSAR’s (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle SAR) significantly greater signal-to-noise ratio and finer spatial resolution allowed successful pattern discrimination related to a combination of oil slick thickness, fractional surface coverage, and emulsification.
Further, in situ burning and smoke plumes were studied with AVIRIS and corroborated spaceborne CALIPSO (Cloud Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observation) observations of combustion aerosols. CALIPSO and bathymetry lidar data documented shallow subsurface oil, although ancillary data were required for confirmation.
Airborne hyperspectral, thermal infrared data have nighttime and overcast collection advantages, and were collected as well as MODIS thermal data. However, interpretation challenges and a lack of Rapid Response Products prevented significant use. Rapid Response Products were key to response utilization—data needs are time critical; thus, a high technological readiness level is vital to operational use of remote sensing products. The DWH oil spill experience demonstrated that development and operationalization of new near real-time spill response remote sensing tools must precede the next major oil spill (Leifer et al., 2012).
Cleanup of a SONS involve multiple skimmer ships, vessels collecting oil for in situ burning, and chemical dispersant operations. Typically these slow moving response ships are spread over a large area and guided by air support (e.g., helicopter), as the vessel bridge is too low to see the variation in thickness of the oil. Typically the manned air support will inform each ship of the location of recoverable oil ahead and then leave to overfly the next ship.
The cost of manned air support is significant, so each ship does not usually have dedicated continuous manned air support. In smaller spills, a report of oil location is given to the responding ship, these ships move slowly, so by the time they reach the location provided by manned air support, the oil has moved! For oil cleanup to be optimal (quickest) and effective (most oil recovered) the skimmer ships need to first focus on the regions of thickest oil. From the visual perspective of the ships crew, relatively close to the water and with a shallow viewing angle, it is not easy to know where the thickest oil is. Accurately discerning the gradations in black oil thickness is a challenging task.
Rich information on the thickness of the oil and the degree of weathering is contained in the detailed hyperspectral signature of the oil spill. This information can be utilized through the use of machine learning to provide real time response tools.
Summary
We have seen that machine learning has found many applications in remote sensing. These applications range from retrieval algorithms to bias correction, from code acceleration to detection of disease in crops, from classification of pelagic habitats to the rock type classification. As a broad subfield of artificial intelligence, machine learning is concerned with algorithms and techniques that allow computers to “learn.” The major focus of machine learning is to extract information from data automatically by computational and statistical methods. Over the last decade there has been considerable progress in developing a machine learning methodology for a variety of Earth Science applications involving trace gases, retrievals, aerosol products, land surface products, vegetation indices, and most recently, ocean applications.
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Lary, D.J. et al. (2018). Machine Learning Applications for Earth Observation. In: Mathieu, PP., Aubrecht, C. (eds) Earth Observation Open Science and Innovation. ISSI Scientific Report Series, vol 15. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-65633-5_8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-65633-5_8
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