International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Volume XXXIX-B4, 2012
XXII ISPRS Congress, 25 August — 01 September 2012, Melbourne, Australia
EVALUATION OF ASTER GDEM v.2 USING GPS CHECKPOINTS, OSGB DEM
VALUES AND PHOTOGAMMETRICALLY DERIVED DEMS
Haval Sadeq, Jane Drummond, Zhenhong Li.
School of Geographical and Earth Sciences, College of Science and Engineering, University of Glasgow, G12 8QQ, UK.
(jane.drummond@glasgow.ac.uk).
Commission IV, WG IV/6
KEYWORDS: ASTER GDEM, accuracy, bias, test-sites, slope-effect, coastal-cffect.
ABSTRACT:
A 2010 study examining ASTER GDEM v1 data revealed accuracies of 12-25m and strong negative discrepancy biases compared to
precise GPS observations, in several test sites in China. Rather than further investigating these, with the advent of ASTER GDEM v2
a new series of tests, also using precise GPS observations but also
other DEMs, was performed. In these tests better than the expected
17m accuracies were found (RMSE values of 3.9m to 15.3m) and no strong biases.
1. BACKGROUND
A study, with colleagues (Li, et al., 2012) revealed accuracies
of 12-25m in five Chinese test areas when comparing
ASTER GDEM vl values with high accuracy GPS check
points. This accuracy was poorer than expected, but also
exposed a strong negative bias in most of the test areas. For
purposes of comparison SRTM data of the test areas were
also investigated revealing no negative bias. The test areas
were coastal, agricultural, steep /mountainous and high
plateau. We proposed several reasons for the bias including
landcover effects, the lack of a water mask and other
systematic errors in the data processing. It was planned to
look at the data further in more extensive areas in China and
three test sites in the UK (mountainous, coastal and
agricultural). However the very recent advent (October,
2011) of ASTER GDEM v2 encouraged us to immediately
investigate these new data, particularly with respect to the
negative bias, using the three British test areas, only.
Comparisons were planned with GPS check points, 10m
DTMs supplied by the national mapping organization
(Ordnance Survey of Great Britain or OSGB) and in-house
generated digital photogrammetric DTMs. Investigation has
shown improved accuracy (15.2m, 8.7m and 3.7m,
respectively) in the three sites. This paper will present the
findings and details of our validation with regard to the three
test areas and the four data sources (ASTER GDEM v2;
OSGB Profile DTMs; digital photogrammetry; high accuracy
GPS).
2. TEST AREAS
The test areas are Plockton (forest /mountainous),
Caerlaverock Merse (coastal/ salt-marsh/pasture), Wicken
Fen (low lying/ inland/arable). They are located in northern,
central, and southern Britain, as follows (shown by their
approx. centrepoints’ Lat/Long):
Lat Long
Plockton 57.33°N 5.61°W
Caerlaverock Merse 54.98°N 3.54°W
Wicken Fen 52.33°N 0.31°E
The three areas are well known to the authors. Precise GPS
observations had been gathered in Plockton in 2007, and
these are utilised. The GPS derived coordinates of these
points are shown in Table 1, with their ASTER, OSGB and
photogrammetric heights (derived from digitally processed
1:14000 scale RC20 aerial photography, flown 2004); all
heights are on the ODN vertical datum (that used by OSGB).
3. METHODOLOGY
For all three areas ASTER GDEM v2 was compared with
OSGB Profile DTMs. The ASTER GDEM v2 is supplied at 1
arc-second resolution (approx. 30x15m at the UK's latitude),
with geographical coordinates based on the WGS84 ellipsoid
and height values based on the EGMO96 geoid. The
coordinates used by ASTER are the same as the Google Earth
reference system, importantly with heights, for the UK, some
30m different from those based on the WGS84 ellipsoid,
according to Lemoine et al. (1998). The difference between
the EGM96 and ODN is small, being about 80cm over the
British Isles (Stillman, 2009). The data sets were imported
into ArcMap having been appropriately labelled for their
original planimetric coordinates (ASTER: Lat, Long on
WGS84; OSGB Profile: BNG). The project in ArcMap was
set up with BNG planimetric coordinates, thus, on import to
ArcMap, ASTER Lat, Long values were displayed as BNG
coordinates. The height correction, ensuring both terrain
models were based on the same vertical datum (ODN),
involved a simple -80cm shift to the ASTER data. Thus all
terrain models were approximately the same resolution, and
the same coordinate frame and vertical datum.
ASTER GDEM v2 and OSGB Profile terrain models were
processed to provide ‘difference maps’ (Figs la, 3a, 4a). The
average difference in each case is: 0.8m, 0.4m and 4.9m, and
considerably less than in our previous study using ASTER
GDEM v1 data (typically 20 — 30m). Histograms of the
distribution of values from each of the ‘difference maps’ do
not show the negative bias previously identified (Figs 2c, 3c,
4c) The greatest differences tend to be found in steep,
forested areas and the smallest differences in the areas of
pastureland, with arable land intermediate; but, anomalously,
in the third test site (Wicken Fen) very high differences were
found in low-lying (below sea-level, but inland) arable land.
Table 1 shows the E,N and elevation values of the fifteen
precise GPS points, the height value of those same points
from the ASTER GDEM v2, the OSGB Profile and the
(incomplete) photogrammetric terrain models, giving
RMSE’s of 7.3, 2.1 and 3.7m, respectively.