Haul roads in surface mining are critical infrastructure directly influencing operational productivity, safety, and costs. However, these networks change frequently due to ongoing mining activities, making traditional mapping methods impractical for large-scale or rapidly evolving sites. Remote sensing imagery offers a scalable alternative, yet complex backgrounds, variable road widths, and spectral similarities between roads and surrounding surfaces make accurate extraction challenging. This study proposes HRM-Net, a hybrid transformer–CNN autoencoder framework for automated extraction of mine haul roads from remote sensing imagery. HRM-Net introduces inception-like patch embedding to capture local contextual information and employs a manifold-constrained hyper-connection strategy in the attention and fusion blocks to enhance information flow across the architecture. This hierarchical design enables progressive learning of discriminative semantic representations across multiple spatial resolutions, critical for road extraction in cluttered mining environments. Trained and evaluated on diverse mine sites, HRM-Net achieved 92.53% overall accuracy, 85.12% F1-score, 75.57% mIoU, 83.57% precision, and 86.94% recall, outperforming state-of-the-art transformer-based and CNN-based segmentation models. Furthermore, model interpretability was analyzed through linear probing and boundary alignment evaluations. Results demonstrate that discriminative features emerge at early network stages and are effectively preserved throughout the architecture, while boundary predictions exhibit superior consistency compared to existing approaches.
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L. Moradi
Kamran Esmaeili
Remote Sensing
University of Toronto
Hudbay Minerals (Canada)
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Moradi et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69eb0bfa553a5433e34b56fd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18091264