Accurate extraction of impervious surface areas (ISA) is essential for urban environmental monitoring, yet severe spectral confusion among complex urban land-cover types limits the performance of classifications based solely on optical imagery. To address this issue within a localized context, this study proposes a multi-source framework integrating UAV-based LiDAR (UAV-LiDAR) and high-resolution visible imagery for fine-scale ISA extraction. An improved segmentation optimization strategy, termed EGS-Optimizer, is developed to enhance boundary delineation within the object-based image analysis (OBIA) framework by coupling edge detection with global segmentation quality evaluation. A comprehensive feature set including spectral, index, texture, geometric, and terrain features is constructed, and Shapley Additive Explanations (SHAP) is applied to select the most informative variables while reducing dimensionality. The proposed framework is validated in a typical 1.45 km2 built-up area in Deyang City, Sichuan Province. Experimental results demonstrate that, within this specific study area, multi-source data fusion improves classification accuracy by 3.59–5.79% compared with single-source data, while feature selection reduces the feature dimension from 45 to 21. Among the evaluated classifiers, the random forest (RF) model achieves the highest performance, with an overall accuracy of 97.24% (Kappa = 0.96). While the high accuracy highlights the efficacy of synergizing spectral and structural information for micro-landscape mapping, these findings are constrained to the demonstrated fine-scale local environment. The results provide an effective, interpretable solution for detailed neighborhood-level ISA mapping, though further validation is required before the framework can be generalized to larger or more heterogeneous urban scenarios.
Bao et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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