Dataset of Land Use
Classification of Rural Courtyards by UAV Image Fusion Deep Learning: Take
Ciyutuo Village as an Example
Xu, Y.
T.1,2 Li, J. Z.3 Ren, W. X.1 Xu, Y. P.1,2 Li, H.Q.1,4 Xue, B.1.*
1.
Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenyang 110016,
China;
2.
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China;
3.
College of Urban and Environmental Sciences, Xuchang University, Xuchang
461000, China;
4.
Department of Circular Economy and Recycling Technology, Technical University
of Berlin, Berlin 10623, Germany
Abstract: The courtyard structure dataset plays a key role in
refining the identification of rural spatial structures and promoting
comprehensive rural revitalization. Here, we take Ciyutuo Village in Shenyang
City, Liaoning Province as the experimental area, and use the UAV field aerial
data in September 2022 to address these efforts. Based on the QGIS and Geoscene
Pro platform, deep learning and artificial visual interpretation methods are
used to produce the experimental dataset of land use classification in Ciyutuo
Village. The dataset includes (1) courtyard distribution data generated by deep
learning of UAV images, including residential
courtyards, industrial-collective courtyards, and abandoned courtyards; (2)
Building distribution data, including farm buildings, industrial-collective
buildings, and abandoned buildings; (3) Vector data of roads and farmland in
residential areas; (4) Typical courtyard structure classification diagram. The
dataset is archived in .shp and .tif formats, consisting of 65 data files, with
a data size of 8.97 MB (compressed to 1 file, 6.84 MB ).
Keywords: village; courtyard structure; UAV
imagery; Ciyutuo Village; deep learning
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3974/geodp.2024.02.06
CSTR: https://cstr.escience.org.cn/CSTR:20146.14.2024.02.06
Dataset Availability Statement:
The
dataset supporting this paper was published and is accessible through the Digital Journal of Global Change Data
Repository at: https://doi.org/10.3974/geodb.2024.06.10.V1 or
https://cstr.escience.org.cn/CSTR:20146.11.2024.06.10.V1.
1 Introduction
Villages, as the fundamental carriers for rural
revitalization and the basic units for coordinated regional spatial governance
and the integration of human and natural ecosystems, encompass numerous
critical issues, including the harmonious development of people and nature[1,2].
Addressing micro-level challenges within the framework of family courtyards in
these villages is essential for stabilizing rural ecosystems and advancing
overall rural revitalization. Since the 19th National Congress of the Communist
Party of China, the CPC Central Committee has repeatedly emphasized the
importance of rural revitalization, highlighting the need for the rational
protection, utilization, optimization, and renewal of rural resources to
promote sustainable, ecologically livable rural environments[3–5]. In recent years, numerous scholars studying villages have approached
their research from various disciplinary perspectives, resulting in a wealth of
valuable findings. Urban and rural planning mainly focuses on the construction
of rural living space architectural style[6], spatial
form optimization[7] and functional area planning[8]. Architecture focuses on the architectural style of rural residential
buildings and the improvement technology of living space performance[9]. Geographers focus on the evolution of spatial and temporal patterns of
rural transformation [10], food security[11], and rural sustainable development evaluation[12], while ecologists focus on the quality assessment of human settlements[13], rural ecosystem services[14] and rural resource metabolism
activities[4]. At present, the existing building
spatial datasets are mainly concentrated in urban areas, such as functional area
division[15], solid building surface extraction[16], and the scale is generally macro, lacking fine expression on the micro
scale. Therefore, to build the datasets on the scale of rural courtyards has
remarkable theoretical significance and practical value towards promoting the
global integration and diversified value-added of rural resources.
2 Metadata of
the Dataset
The metadata
of the UAV imagery with deep learning based land use classification dataset in
Ciyutuo Village practice[17] is summarized in Table 1. It includes the dataset
full name, abbreviations, authors, geographic zone, year of the dataset,
spatial resolution, data format, data size, data files, data publisher, and
data sharing policy, etc.
3 Methods
3.1 Study Area
The
demonstrated research area is part of Ciyutuo Village, Shenbei New District,
Shenyang City (Figure 1). Ciyutuo Village is situated in the central part of
the Liaohe River Plain, characterized by a flat and open terrain. The village
experiences a temperate continental monsoon climate, with cold and dry winters,
warm and rainy summers, and windy conditions in both spring and winter. In
recent years, the local government has made significant strides in
infrastructure development, actively promoting green production and sustainable
lifestyles, giving the village a refreshed appearance. Additionally, efforts
have been made to foster new rural business ventures in agriculture, courtyard
economies, tourism, and other related industries, which show promising
potential. However, challenges remain, such as the outmigration of young and
middle-aged labor, the abandonment of courtyards, and inadequate management and
maintenance of the ??toilet revolution??. This region faces the practical
problems and needs of stock revitalization[19], supply and demand
docking, planning guidance, fund raising, follow-up operation and maintenance,
and effectiveness evaluation.
Table 1 Metadata summary
of the dataset
Items
|
Description
|
Dataset full name
|
UAV Imagery with deep learning based land use classification
dataset in Ciyutuo Village practice
|
Dataset short name
|
VillageCiyutuo_2022
|
Authors
|
Xu, Y. T., Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of
Sciences, xuyaotian22@163.com
Li, J. Z., Xuchang University, zhong_lij@163.com
Ren, W. X., Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of
Sciences, renwanxia@iae.ac.cn
Xu, Y. P., Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of
Sciences, 17839964283@163.com
Li, H. Q., Technical University of Berlin, lihongq@163.com
Xue, B., Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences,
xuebing@iae.ac.cn
|
Geographical region
|
Ciyutuo Village, Shenbei New District, Shenyang City
|
Year
|
2022 Spatial
resolution 5 cm
|
Data format
|
.shp, .tif
|
Data size
|
8.97 MB (compressed into one file with 6.84 MB)
|
Data files
|
courtyard.rar, building.rar, road&farmland.rar, typical courtyard
structure classification atlas.tif
|
Foundations
|
Chinese Academy of Sciences (XDA28060302, XDA28090300); National
Natural Science Foundation of China (41971166)
|
Data publisher
|
Global Change Research Data Publishing & Repository,
http://www.geodoi.ac.cn
|
Address
|
No.
11A, Datun Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100101, China
|
Data sharing policy
|
(1) Data are openly available and can be free
downloaded via the Internet; (2) End users are encouraged to use Data subject to citation; (3) Users,
who are by definition also value-added service providers, are welcome to
redistribute Data subject to
written permission from the GCdataPR Editorial Office and the issuance of a Data redistribution license; and (4) If
Data are used to compile new
datasets, the ??ten per cent principal?? should be followed such that Data records utilized should not surpass
10% of the new dataset contents, while sources should be clearly noted in
suitable places in the new dataset[18]
|
Communication and
searchable system
|
DOI, CSTR, Crossref, DCI, CSCD, CNKI, SciEngine,
WDS, GEOSS, PubScholar, CKRSC
|
Figure 1 Locationg and overview of the study area
3.2
Data Sources and Processing
The
original UAV aerial remote sensing image data of this dataset was taken by
authors?? team in the Ciyutuo Village in September 2022, with a spatial
resolution of 5 cm. The specific data processing method flow is as follows:
(1) Establish a
basic framework for interpreting the metabolic activities of natural village
courtyard resources
This study
initially constructed a basic framework for interpreting resource metabolic
activities at the family courtyard scale based on natural villages in Northeast
China (Figure 2), which mainly includes three levels: method level, element
level, and expression level. In the method level, the expansion design is
carried out by combining UAV interpretation with field research. In the element
level, through the super-fine interpretation of the 5-cm resolution image,
three elements are obtained: courtyard structure, single building roof
characteristics, and surface hardening condition. To solve the problem of
occlusion caused by UAV aerial photography on the characteristics of ground
objects, the study is based on field research to test the interpretation and
sample the basic family situation of villagers. And the expression level
contains a variety of more detailed indicator elements, which is the
fundamental basis for the optimal allocation of ultra-refined village resource
elements.
Figure 2 Basic framework for
interpreting resource metabolic activities at the family courtyard scale based
on natural villages in Northeast China
(2) Feature
vectorization and recognition
Based on the
Mapflow plug-in built in the QGIS platform, the deep learning feature boundary
recognition of the houses is carried out, and the boundary surface layer of the
houses in Ciyutuo Village is extracted. After manual verification and
correction, the accuracy is 99 %. Based on the Geoscene Pro platform,
artificial visual recognition interpretation and vectorization operation of UAV
remote sensing images are carried out, and the boundary layer of the courtyard,
the road layer, and the farmland layer of the village group are obtained. Among
them, the house layer is divided into three types: family-use houses, family
abandoned houses, and industrial-collective land houses (generally referring to
land for the integrated development of primary, secondary, and tertiary
industries in rural areas, used for the construction of privately or
collectively operated industrial sites for agricultural product processing and
distribution, rural leisure and tourism, e-commerce, and so on). Each layer
contains four attribute fields: perimeter, area, building structure, and number
of floors. The courtyard layer is categorized into three types: courtyards in
use by families, abandoned family courtyards, and industrial-collective land
courtyards. These types also have four attribute fields: perimeter, area,
courtyard orientation, and road type. The road layer includes all main roads
within the village group, while the farmland layer encompasses large tracts of
land belonging to the village group as well as cultivated land within
courtyards.
(3) Field survey
and examination
The fieldwork
was organized into three key areas: household livelihoods, resource metabolism
patterns, and house courtyard characteristics. The analysis of household
livelihoods focused on factors such as family size, income sources, production
means (including cultivated land area, livestock numbers, crop yields and
market prices, and the use of agricultural machinery), the average age of the
labor force, total village population, migration rates, and agricultural
support policies. Resource metabolism patterns were assessed through data on
toilet types, solar equipment installations, heating methods, and overall
energy consumption. The characteristics of house courtyards were examined in
three aspects: surface hardening types, building types, and roof
characteristics.
4 Data Results
4.1 Data Composition
The
dataset consists of four files:
(1) Courtyard
distribution data generated by deep learning of UAV images;
(2) Building
distribution data;
(3) Vector data
of roads and farmland in residential areas;
(4) Typical
courtyard structure classification diagram.
4.2 Data Results
Figure 3 Land use
distribution of rural courtyards in Ciyutuo Village
|
4.2.1 The Macro Overall Layout of the Village Courtyard
The
total area of the residents?? living area in the village (Figure 3) is about 5.6
?? 105 m2, of which the total area of cultivated land is
about 4.1 ?? 105 m2. The area primarily consists of
one-year rice crops cultivated by individuals or collectives. In some
courtyards, only cornfields or vegetable gardens are grown, while a few engage in livestock and poultry farming, raising
pigeons, sheep, cattle, and horses. Most village
collectives focus on large-scale greenhouse farming, livestock
breeding, and the processing of agricultural and sideline products. They also
manage centralized resource facilities, such as unified recycling and waste
treatment plants. Additionally, some villagers, leveraging national rural
revitalization and energy development strategies, engage in specialty farming,
livestock breeding, and the installation of distributed photovoltaic systems in
courtyards or on unused land. Based on image analysis and field research, the
region contains a total of 406 courtyards. Among them, there are 393 households
with long-term or seasonal residence, accounting for 96.8 % of the total
dynamic classification of courtyard use; 10 abandoned courtyards, accounting
for about 2.5 % of the total; and 3 industrial-collective land courtyards,
accounting for about 0.7 % of the total. The rural courtyards are mainly
planted with rice, and the cultivated land area accounts for a large
proportion. Individual courtyards are distributed with pigeon sheds, sheep
pens, and other self-employed breeding.
4.2.2 Multi-Feature Recognition and Classification of Typical Courtyard
Structure
The
space of rural courtyards mainly includes the spatial relationship of various
material elements such as living space (residential living area), production
space (planting and breeding), ecological space (resource treatment facilities)
[20]. The overall distribution pattern of Ciyutuo Village has developed
naturally over time. In later stages, it was optimized and adjusted to align
with broader planning efforts. Each courtyard has been constructed and expanded
over generations, with the village layout evolving in clusters near water
sources. As a result, the village is surrounded by natural features such as
farmland and lakes.
Combined with
the spatial structure relationship schema between the spatial pattern of resource
elements in Ciyutuo Village (mainly including ecological planting, livestock
breeding, waste, and idle) and the spatial structure relationship schema of the
living area of the residents?? courtyard, the distribution pattern of resource
elements in the four typical courtyards of ecological agriculture-aquaculture
mixed type, ecological agriculture type, ecological breeding type, and waste
type is generally presented (see data file for detailed atlas). According to
the basic situation of the ground objects around the courtyard, the
characteristics of the images corresponding to different courtyard types are
simplified, and the structure diagram of the courtyard is drawn. At the same
time, the 1 m??1 m gridding and vector grid fusion refinement expression of the
courtyard house is carried out to strengthen its attribute classification and
recognition and resource metabolism calculation ability.
4.2.3 Courtyard Roof Characteristics and Types
In
addition to the use of energy-efficient, easy-to-control heating and cooling
equipment, the key to reducing building energy consumption is to strengthen the
design and enclosure of the thermal insulation and heat insulation performance
of the building structure and reduce the heat transfer coefficient of the roof
structure. As one of the building envelopes, the roof is exposed to direct
sunlight all year round, and the indoor and outdoor temperature difference heat
transfer is carried out. The heat consumption caused by the roof is greater
than that of any external wall or surface[21]. Due to long-standing
economic and construction technology limitations in rural areas, the design of
courtyard buildings often relies on natural materials without accounting for
energy-saving requirements. Roofs are rarely insulated, resulting in a heat
transfer coefficient significantly higher than that of urban buildings.
Additionally, most houses in Ciyutuo Village are single-story structures built
with brick-concrete, which increases the proportion of energy loss through the
roof in relation to total building energy consumption. Therefore, based on the
various roof types in Ciyutuo Village, this study analyzes the material and
structural characteristics to establish roof-related energy consumption
indicators. These include roof service life, thermal insulation performance,
and waterproofing capabilities, though specific energy consumption values for
these indicators require further investigation.
Figure 4 Summary of the
characteristics and types of
courtyard roofs in
the? Ciyutuo Village
|
In general, the
design requirements of the roof often include five aspects[22]: (1)
waterproof and reliable, rapid drainage; (2) good thermal insulation
performance; (3) the structure is safe and reliable; (4) beautiful appearance;
(5) other functional requirements of solar equipment placement. Here, combined
with the field situation, the roof is divided by material, which mainly
includes reinforced concrete roof, tile roof, and metal roof (including color
steel shed). Through the remote sensing image overlooking observation and
on-the- spot investigation, according to the roof shape, it is summarized into
two types: flat roof and slope roof (double slope roof and four slope roof);
according to the location attributes and usage of the house, it is divided into
five categories: flat roof main roof, double slope and four slope main roof,
flat roof side roof, double slope side roof, and damaged roof (Figure 4). Among
them, the flat roof is the most widely used roof form at present. Because it is
easy to coordinate the relationship between building and structure, save
materials, and fast construction progress, the roof surface is flat, and it can
be used as a variety of utilization methods of living space, such as a crop
drying platform or clothes drying platform. The slope roof has a long history
in China and has been widely built in rural areas. The roof is steep and easy
to drain rain and snow. It is generally composed of two parts: load-bearing
structure and roof. According to different needs, it also has insulation layer,
heat insulation layer, and ceiling structure.
5 Discussion and Conclusion
From
an interdisciplinary perspective, integrating the human-land system has
increasingly become a crucial approach to alleviating pressure on rural
ecological environments, realizing the diversified value-added potential of
rural resources, and enhancing the vibrancy of rural living spaces. As the core
region for economic development in Liaoning and a key area for modern urban
agriculture, regional specialty agriculture, and rural tourism, this
integration plays a vital role in advancing the scientific development and
optimization of rural production, living, and ecological spaces, thereby
supporting the growth of ecological economies. The creation of the first
micro-spatial dataset for land use allocation within village courtyards in
Shenyang sheds light on the spatial distribution patterns of rural human
settlements amid recent urbanization. This dataset provides valuable data for
understanding the vitality of rural settlements in Shenyang and assessing the
potential for resource optimization.
As the smallest
unit of administrative division, the village functions as a compact social
ecosystem shaped by its natural environment, serving as a microcosm of broader
society. The courtyard, being an even smaller unit, plays a crucial role in
integrating agricultural production with living spaces, facilitating the
transformation, circulation, and utilization of regional biomass resources.
However, in the context of refined national social governance, the absence of
detailed dataset at the courtyard scale remains a fundamental obstacle to
optimizing village resource allocation. This issue manifests in three main
ways: first, traditional aerial remote sensing images have low resolution,
which hampers detailed spatial analysis at the village scale; second, official
public data sources, such as statistical yearbooks, lack village-scale data
statistics, and third, artificial field-work based sampling is often
incomplete, with challenges related to high costs and time consumption.
This study
introduces a method for interpreting family courtyard structures using
ultra-high resolution UAV images with a 5-cm resolution. By employing the
Mapflow plug-in within the QGIS platform and applying deep learning techniques,
the study processes these images to extract the vector boundaries of houses in
Ciyutuo Village. After manual classification, verification, and correction, the
accuracy of this method reaches 99%. Using the Geoscene Pro platform, the UAV
images are manually interpreted and vectorized to create boundary surface,
road, and farmland vector layers for various types of courtyards in the
village. This dataset, including four sets of vector data and a typical
courtyard structure classification atlas, will aid in the further exploration
of the spatial allocation characteristics of ultra-refined courtyard resources
in Northeast China. Building on this, the study develops an ultra-refined model
for interpreting family courtyard resource metabolism and establishes
methodologies for constructing spatial dataset. Multi-layer modeling is
conducted based on industrial, economic, environmental, and geographic spatial
grids, with logical relationships between elements deduced to effectively
represent element flows. This approach aims to accurately align the sustainable
development model with village environmental, economic, and geographic units,
enhancing the supply of ecological products and services at the courtyard
level. The goal is to achieve synchronous upgrading, value-added, and benefits
within the micro-level ecological-social-economic system, providing efficient
scientific support for the global integration and diversified value-added of
rural resources.
Author
Contributions
Xu, Y. T., Li, J.
Z., and Xue, B. conducted the overall design of the
dataset development; Li, J. Z. and Ren, W. X. collected and processed the data
of UAV Image; Xu, Y. T. vectorized and refined the data; Xu, Y. T., Ren, W. X.,
and Xu, Y. P. conducted field research and data verification; Xu, Y. T. and Li,
H. Q. wrote the data paper.
Conflicts of Interest
The
authors declare no conflicts of interest.
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