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Poster

Multi-modal Learning for Geospatial Vegetation Forecasting

Vitus Benson · Claire Robin · Christian Requena-Mesa · LAZARO ALONSO SILVA · Mélanie Weynants · Nora Linscheid · Jose Cortes · Zhihan Gao · Nuno Carvalhais · Markus Reichstein

Arch 4A-E Poster #350
[ ] [ Paper PDF ]
Fri 21 Jun 5 p.m. PDT — 6:30 p.m. PDT

Abstract:

Precise geospatial vegetation forecasting holds potential across diverse sectors, including agriculture, forestry, humanitarian aid, and carbon accounting. To leverage the vast availability of satellite imagery for this task, various works have applied deep neural networks for predicting multispectral images in photorealistic quality. However, the important area of vegetation dynamics has not been thoroughly explored. Our study introduces GreenEarthNet, the first dataset specifically designed for high-resolution vegetation forecasting, and Contextformer, a novel deep learning approach for predicting vegetation greenness from Sentinel 2 satellite images with fine resolution across Europe. Our multi-modal transformer model Contextformer leverages spatial context through a vision backbone and predicts the temporal dynamics on local context patches incorporating meteorological time series in a parameter-efficient manner. The GreenEarthNet dataset features a learned cloud mask and an appropriate evaluation scheme for vegetation modeling. It also maintains compatibility with the existing satellite imagery forecasting dataset EarthNet2021, enabling cross-dataset model comparisons. Our extensive qualitative and quantitative analyses reveal that our methods outperform a broad range of baseline techniques. This includes surpassing previous state-of-the-art models on EarthNet2021, as well as adapted models from time series forecasting and video prediction. To the best of our knowledge, this work presents the first models for continental-scale vegetation modeling at fine resolution able to capture anomalies beyond the seasonal cycle, thereby paving the way for predicting vegetation health and behaviour in response to climate variability and extremes. We provide open source code and pre-trained weights to reproduce our experimental results under https://github.com/vitusbenson/greenearthnet.

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