Background and Purpose: Recent research on generation of digital surface models (DSMs) using image matching methods revealed a great potential of DSM application in forestry, especially in forest inventory. However, research dealing with DSM generation from digital aerial images are still lacking in Croatia. Therefore, the main objective of this study was to present the workflow for generating high density DSM from colour infrared (CIR) digital stereo aerial images using area-based image matching algorithm.
Materials and Methods:The high density DSM was generated from colour infrared digital aerial stereo images using Dense DTM algorithm of PHOTOMOD software -an area-based image matching algorithm which operates on the principle of cross-correlation approach. To evaluate the quality of the generated DSM, an agreement assessment with manual stereo measurements was conducted over three different land cover classes (forests, shrubs, grasslands)
INTRODUCTION
Photogrammetry is a typical engineering discipline that is greatly influenced by developments in computer science and electronics (1). This has become especially evident over the past thirty years during which photogrammetry has gone through transition from analogue, over analytical to digital photogrammetry (1, 2). During this development period, analogue aerial photographs as well as analogue and analytical stereo instruments have been replaced with digital aerial images and digital photogrammetric workstations (3,4). Current digital aerial photogrammetric cameras are capable of capturing digital aerial images of very high spatial resolution with ground sampling distance (GSD) of only several centimetres (5). In addition, the radiometric resolution of digital images is superior in comparison to the resolution of analogue photographs (6). Such quality digital images in combination with digital photogrammetric workstations have led to automation, facilitation and improvements in performance of many demanding photogrammetric procedures (aerial triangulation, digital terrain models generation, orthophoto generation, etc.) (7,8).The automation in digital photogrammetry is based on stereo photogrammetric processing called image matching, also referred to as image correlation (9). The aim of image matching is to find corresponding points in two or more stereo images based on their radiometric and geometric similarity (10). The result of image matching is image 3D point cloud which is then used to generate digital terrain model (DTM) which represents the elevation of the Earth's terrain (bare ground) or digital surface model (DSM) which represents the elevation of the Earth's surface including the human-made (e.g. buildings) or natural (e.g. trees) features.In recent years, the automatic DTM and DSM generation through image matching has encountered great interest among the researchers worldwide (11). Various image matching algorithms and photogrammetric software packages have been developed and have become commercially available (11). The main image matchi...