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Martin Schwartz

Possible papers associated with this exact author name in Arrow. This page groups case-insensitive exact name matches and is not a full identity disambiguation profile.

2 papers
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2

ICML Conference 2025 Conference Paper

DUNIA: Pixel-Sized Embeddings via Cross-Modal Alignment for Earth Observation Applications

  • Ibrahim Fayad
  • Max Zimmer
  • Martin Schwartz
  • Fabian Gieseke
  • Philippe Ciais
  • Gabriel Belouze
  • Sarah Brood
  • AurĂ©lien de Truchis

Significant efforts have been directed towards adapting self-supervised multimodal learning for Earth observation applications. However, most current methods produce coarse patch-sized embeddings, limiting their effectiveness and integration with other modalities like LiDAR. To close this gap, we present DUNIA, an approach to learn pixel-sized embeddings through cross-modal alignment between images and full-waveform LiDAR data. As the model is trained in a contrastive manner, the embeddings can be directly leveraged in the context of a variety of environmental monitoring tasks in a zero-shot setting. In our experiments, we demonstrate the effectiveness of the embeddings for seven such tasks: canopy height mapping, fractional canopy cover, land cover mapping, tree species identification, plant area index, crop type classification, and per-pixel waveform-based vertical structure mapping. The results show that the embeddings, along with zero-shot classifiers, often outperform specialized supervised models, even in low-data regimes. In the fine-tuning setting, we show strong performances near or better than the state-of-the-art on five out of six tasks.

ICML Conference 2024 Conference Paper

Estimating Canopy Height at Scale

  • Jan Pauls
  • Max Zimmer
  • Una M. Kelly
  • Martin Schwartz
  • Sassan Saatchi
  • Philippe Ciais
  • Sebastian Pokutta
  • Martin Brandt

We propose a framework for global-scale canopy height estimation based on satellite data. Our model leverages advanced data preprocessing techniques, resorts to a novel loss function designed to counter geolocation inaccuracies inherent in the ground-truth height measurements, and employs data from the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission to effectively filter out erroneous labels in mountainous regions, enhancing the reliability of our predictions in those areas. A comparison between predictions and ground-truth labels yields an MAE/RMSE of 2. 43 / 4. 73 (meters) overall and 4. 45 / 6. 72 (meters) for trees taller than five meters, which depicts a substantial improvement compared to existing global-scale products. The resulting height map as well as the underlying framework will facilitate and enhance ecological analyses at a global scale, including, but not limited to, large-scale forest and biomass monitoring.