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Get Free AccessContextual features play a critical role in geospatial object detection by characterizing the surrounding environment of objects. In existing deep learning-based studies of 3D point cloud classification and segmentation, these features have been represented through geometric descriptors, semantic context (i.e., modeled by an attention-based mechanism), global-level context (i.e., through global aggregation), and textural representation (e.g., RGB, intensity, and other attributes). Even though contextual features have been widely explored, spatial contextual features that explicitly capture spatial autocorrelation and neighborhood dependency have received limited attention in object detection tasks. This gap is particularly relevant in the context of GeoAI, which calls for mutual benefits between artificial intelligence and geographic information science. To bridge this gap, this study presents a spatial autocorrelation encoder, namely SA-Encoder, designed to inform 3D geospatial object detection by capturing spatial autocorrelation representation as types of spatial contextual features. The study investigated the effectiveness of such spatial contextual features by estimating the performance of a model trained on them alone. The results suggested that the derived spatial autocorrelation information can help adequately identify some large objects in an urban-rural scene, such as buildings, terrain, and large trees. We further investigated how the spatial autocorrelation encoder can inform model performance in a geospatial object detection task. The results demonstrated significant improvements in detection accuracy across varied urban and rural environments when we compared the results to models without considering spatial autocorrelation as an ablation experiment. Moreover, the approach also outperformed the models trained by explicitly feeding traditional spatial autocorrelation measures (i.e., Matheron’s semivariance). This study showcases the advantage of the adaptiveness of the neural network-based encoder in deriving a spatial autocorrelation representation. This advancement bridges the gap between theoretical geospatial concepts and practical AI applications. Consequently, this study demonstrates the potential of integrating geographic theories with deep learning technologies to address challenges in 3D object detection, paving the way for further innovations in this field.
Tianyang Chen, Wenwu Tang, Shenen Chen, Craig Allan (2025). SA-Encoder: A Learnt Spatial Autocorrelation Representation to Inform 3D Geospatial Object Detection. , 17(17), DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17173124.
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Type
Article
Year
2025
Authors
4
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
en
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17173124
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