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Author(s) Nadiia Kopiika Andreas Karavias Pavlos Krassakis Zehao Ye Jelena Ninic Nataliya Shakhovska Sotirios Argyroudis Stergios-Aristoteles Mitoulis

Rapid post-disaster infrastructure damage characterisation using remote sensing and deep learning technologies: A tiered approach

Source
Elsevier

Critical infrastructure is vital for connectivity and economic growth but faces systemic threats from human- induced damage, climate change and natural disasters. Rapid, multi-scale damage assessments are essential, yet integrated, automated methodologies remain underdeveloped.

This paper presents a multi-scale tiered approach, which addresses this gap, by demonstrating how automated damage characterisation can be achieved using digital technologies. The methodology is then applied and validated through a case study in Ukraine involving 17 bridges damaged by targeted human interventions.

Technology is deployed across regional to component scales, integrating assessments using Sentinel-1 SAR images, crowdsourced data, and high-resolution images for deep learning to enable automatic damage detection and characterisation. The interferometric coherence difference and semantic segmentation of images are utilised in a tiered multi-scale approach to enhance the reliability of damage characterisation at various scales. This integrated methodology automates and accelerates decision-making, facilitating more efficient restoration and adaptation efforts and ultimately enhancing infrastructure resilience.

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Rapid post-disaster infrastructure damage characterisation using remote sensing and deep learning technologies: A tiered approach PDF, 28 MB English

Last checked: 5 March 2025

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Themes Critical infrastructure GIS and mapping Recovery Recovery planning Science-policy-practice interface
Cover_Elsevier
ISBN/ISSN/DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.autcon.2024.105955
Number of pages
27 p.
Publication year
2025

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