“…Therefore, visual interpretation is a subjective process [144,145], and the interpretation results of remote mapping tasks are variable among the different volunteers. Previous studies have demonstrated that the with human factors such as experience, expertise, education, motivations and willingness to obtain good results, short-term visual working memory capacity, age, gender, mental conditions, and fatigue may be correlated with the performance of visual interpretation of the imagery [124,145,179]. Contextual information, monocular cues, and image characteristics such as onsite knowledge from the remotely sensed environment, prior knowledge about the expected object types in the scene, texture, shadow, tone or color, size, shape, pattern, location, association, aspect, and spatial resolution are the other factors that may affect the visual interpretation performance [124,[179][180][181][182][183][184].…”