Summary: | In this paper, we propose a method for using mobile laser-scanning data to estimate the green space ratio (GSR), a landscape index that represents the proportion of green area to the whole-view area. The proposed method first classifies and segments vegetation using voxel-based and shape-based approaches. Vertical planar-surface objects are excluded, and randomly distributed objects are extracted as vegetation via multi-spatial-scale analysis. Then, the method generates a map representing occlusion by vegetation, and estimates GSR at an arbitrary location. We applied the method to a data set collected in a residential area in Kyoto, Japan. We compared the results with the ground truth data and obtained a root mean squared error of approximately 4.1%. Although some non-vegetation with rough surfaces was falsely extracted as vegetation, our method seems to estimate GSR to an acceptable accuracy.
|