In: Wagner W., Székely, B. (eds.): ISPRS TC VII Symposium - 100 Years ISPRS, Vienna, Austria, July 5-7, 2010, IAPRS, Vol. XXXVIII, Part 7B
DSM calculated by Infoterra’s
Pixel Factory™
DSM calculated using the
procedure explained above
Figure 3. Comparison of the DSMs
The absolute mean error is not very high, but our DSM is quite
noisy. The standard deviation of the error is quite high. The
GPS control point with the largest absolute error of -68 m is lo
cated near the northwestern mountain peak. In Figure 4 and
Figure 5 the details of the DSMs marked by white boxes in Fig
ure 3 can be seen.
Subset of the Pixel Factory™
DSM on the mountain ridge
Subset of our DSM on the
mountain ridge
Figure 4. Detailed DSM comparison
Subset of the Pixel Factory™
DSM on the mountain ridge
Subset of our DSM on the
mountain ridge
Figure 5. Detailed DSM comparison
The DSM created by Infoterra’s Pixel Factory™ includes large
areas with no value in Figure 4, whereas our DSM interpolates
all areas. Pixel Factory™ is marking the areas where no or no
reliable information is available. This is an important feature of
the Pixel Factory™ for mapping applications.
Our DSM is overestimating the heights at the mountain ridges
compared to the results from Pixel Factory™. The resulting
DSM is noisier, which can be seen very clearly in Figure 5. The
mountains are quite comparable to each other, but in the rather
flat area on the eastern side of the subset shown in Figure 5 our
radargrammetric processor produces very noisy results. This is
still the main problem of our approach.
Figure 6 shows the correlation value of the whole scene. The
river is very striking with a high correlation value. The lower
and flat area near the river also has a high overall correlation,
but the results in this area are still noisy. Along the hillside of
the mountainous areas the overall correlation is much lower.
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