International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B4. Istanbul 2004
already existing orthophoto product at the NGI. In order to
combine the advantages of a grid approach (volume, easy
transferability to the users of rasterdata) and a TIN-approach
(preserving the linear structures) a hybrid form is envisaged. It
should however always be possible to derive differently
structured DTMs directly from the DEDSs, for example in case
we want to work directly on digitized contour lines as described
by Mizukoshi and Aniya (2002). It is therefore of paramount
importance that the DEDSs alone are considered as the core
data.
On a third level we can envisage all kinds of derivative products
such as contour lines, viewshed analysis results, ...).
2.7. Available data sources
The following data sources that contain information on terrain
height are available for the production of a better DEM:
e Points at ground surface and structure lines that were
stereoplotted on aerial b/w photographs on 1:20.500 specifically
for DTM production (DTM10.000 typel), available for 17% of
the country but more will become available through co-
operation with the regions.
e Points from airborne laser (about 1
point/25m”)These are at the moment only available for 160 km?
but in due time much more may become available through co-
operation with the regions. (The derived DTM is known as
DTM 10.000 type 2)
e Points at ground surface measured by terrain survey. These
are available for a small number of very flat areas. The accuracy
is very good (RMS 0.4m) but the data do not include points on
linear terrain features. Addition of linear elements (e.g. dikes)
could remedy this. (The derived DTM is known as DTM10.000
type 3)
e Contour lines that were stereoplotted using aerial b/w
photographs on 1:20.500 and 1:10.000 for flat areas. Both were
extensively checked in field surveys. These are available for a
very large part of the country in vector format. Their general
quality is quite good but locally gaps and blunders are present.
(The derived DTM is known as DTM 10.000 type4).
e Linear elements (embankments, hydrographical elements,
.) in 3D that were stereoplotted for the production of a
topographical map. The elements that are at the ground surface
are a very interesting additional source of data for the build-up
of a countrywide DTM (Ruiz,2000). Before integrating them, a
selection and thorough control of the z-values is necessary as
the emphasis in the past has been more on their planimetrical
position.
* Points from image correlation on aerial b/w photographs
on 1:20.500 and 1:29.000. These are only available for a small
part of the country but can be quickly derived for almost the
whole country, as it is completely covered with the necessary
aerial photographs.
scanning
Depending on the type of area a different kind of data source
provides the optimal (within practical constraints) solution.
Factors that are decisive in the choice of data source are the
availability of the data source, the type of terrain, the amount of
processing that has to be performed on the data source, the
urgency of demand for data in an area... Sometimes a
suboptimal solution needs to be chosen as a stopgap which will
be replaced with a better solution afterwards.
uA
2.8.Quality issues
2.8.1. Accuracy. There are two reasons for a thorough
statistical quality analysis. On the one hand it is needed as a
guide for the upgrading of the DEDS. As such it is really a tool
and not so much an end in itself. On the other hand it is
necessary to give the users of the data (or derived DTMs)
metadata which they can actually use to estimate the usefulness
of the data for their application. Statistical results on the
accuracy of discrete elements contained in the DEDS should be
clearly distinguished from statistics on the accuracies obtained
at random locations in the DTM.
We are setting up a separate DEDS which will only be used as a
source of control points. The height accuracy is in the cm-range.
Here again a policy of recovering past efforts is pursued by
filtering suitable points at the ground surface from the
thousands of control points used for aerotriangulation purposes
in the past 15 years.
Preliminary results show that all four DTM10.000 types yield
significantly better results than the existing DTED level 2
model. E.g. table 1.
Flat terrain (H:3-10m) Hilly terrain (H:60-
230m)
DTM10.000 DTED DTM10.000 DTED
type3 v2 typel lv2
Mean -0.17 -1.30 0.39 -0.32
Variance 0.09 0.67 0.63 4.28
Deviation 0.29 0.82 0.80 2.07
RMS 0.41 1.59 1.06 2.30
Table 1: statistics on the height differences between check points
measured in the field and values derived from a DTM. (H = terrain
height)
A visual inspection of the data by an operator is a step that is
labor intensive but that cannot be neglected. The real bottleneck
in a production environment is always this phase for which
there is however no valid alternative. Even for very automated
and homogeneous techniques such as laser scanning, the
expenditure needed for a good data verification is still
significant (Artuso et al, 2003). Visualizing the DTM as a
shaded image is a very effective way to quickly spot possible
problems (see also Dupéret,1999), although other visualization
techniques are also useful. A mixture of different techniques,
preferably by different operators is still the best quality
assurance policy. The visualization also gives a subjective, quite
intuitive impression of the quality. A comparison of figure 1
and figure 2, both showing the same area gives a good
impression of the improved height resolution of the model and
hints at the better modeling of the terrain.
Int
as
Du
wi
tor
ou!