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Title: Automatic cloud and cloud shadow detection in tropical areas for PlanetScope satellite images
Authors: Wang, J
Yang, D
Chen, S
Zhu, X 
Wu, S
Bogonovich, M
Guo, Z
Zhu, Z
Wu, J
Issue Date: Oct-2021
Source: Remote sensing of environment, Oct. 2021, v. 264, 112604
Abstract: PlanetScope satellite data with a 3-m resolution and near-daily global coverage have been increasingly used for land surface monitoring, ranging from land cover change detection to vegetative biophysics characterization and ecological assessments. Similar to other satellite data, effective screening of clouds and cloud shadows in PlanetScope images is a prerequisite for these applications, yet remains challenging as PlanetScope has 1) fewer spectral bands than other satellites hindering the use of traditional methods, and 2) inconsistent radiometric calibration across satellite sensors making the cloud/shadow detection using fixed thresholds unrealistic. To address these challenges, we developed a SpatioTemporal Integration approach for Automatic Cloud and Shadow Screening (‘STI-ACSS’), including two steps: (1) generating initial masks of clouds/shadows by integrating both spatial (i.e. cloud/shadow indices of an individual PlanetScope image) and temporal (i.e. reflectance outliers in PlanetScope image time series) information with an adaptive threshold approach; (2) a two-step fine-tuning on these initial masks to derive final masks by integrating morphological processing with an object-based cloud and cloud shadow matching. We tested STI-ACSS at six tropical sites representative of different land cover types (e.g. forest, urban, cropland, savannah, and shrubland). For each site, we evaluated the performance of STI-ACSS with reference to the manual masks of clouds/shadows, and compared it with four state-of-the-art methods, namely Function of mask (Fmask), Automatic Time-Series Analysis (ATSA), Iterative Haze Optimized Transformation (IHOT) and the default PlanetScope quality control layer. Our results show that, across all sites, STI-ACSS 1) has the highest average overall accuracy (98.03%), 2) generates an average producer accuracy of 95.53% for clouds and 89.48% for cloud shadows, and 3) is robust across sites and seasons. These results suggest the effectiveness of using STI-ACSS for cloud/shadow detection for PlanetScope satellites in the tropics, with potential to be extended to other satellite sensors with limited spectral bands.
Keywords: Cloud and cloud shadow detection
Ecological and environmental monitoring
Land cover types
Pixel quality control
PlanetScope
Tropical areas
Publisher: Elsevier
Journal: Remote sensing of environment 
ISSN: 0034-4257
EISSN: 1879-0704
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2021.112604
Rights: © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
© 2021. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.
The following publication Wang, J., Yang, D., Chen, S., Zhu, X., Wu, S., Bogonovich, M., . . . Wu, J. (2021). Automatic cloud and cloud shadow detection in tropical areas for PlanetScope satellite images. Remote Sensing of Environment, 264, 112604 is available at https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2021.112604.
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