Release of expanded data set to accelerate machine learning algorithm development
WESTMINSTER, Colo. — (BUSINESS WIRE) — January 10, 2017 — DigitalGlobe, Inc. (NYSE: DGI), the global leader in Earth imagery and information about our changing planet, today announced the successful results of the first SpaceNet Challenge and the next phase of the initiative. SpaceNet is a forward-leaning collaboration between DigitalGlobe, CosmiQ Works, and NVIDIA, which consists of an online repository of freely available satellite imagery, co-registered map layers to train algorithms, and public challenges that accelerate innovation in machine learning.
The first SpaceNet Challenge was launched in November 2016, and 42 developers competed in an open challenge hosted by TopCoder to create algorithms that extract building footprints from satellite imagery. The participants submitted 242 solutions over a three-week period to compete for a total prize pool of $35,000 that was awarded to the top five performing contestants. The winning algorithms will be made available to the open-source community through the SpaceNet GitHub repository and users of DigitalGlobe’s Geospatial Big Data platform, GBDX.
“We are really thrilled by the developers’ level of engagement to use DigitalGlobe imagery, training data, and open-source code to create innovative algorithms,” said Tony Frazier, Senior Vice President and General Manager of Services at DigitalGlobe. “The first SpaceNet Challenge proved we can attract talented developers and data scientists from around the world to bring expertise to the GEOINT community. Fully automated mapping holds the potential to unlock tremendous value for our customers, and we look forward to continuing to support future open innovation initiatives to move the community forward.”
A newly released Points of Interest (POI) dataset for Rio de Janeiro is now freely available to the public via SpaceNet on AWS. This data is made available through the participation of the U.S. National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, which licensed the dataset produced by DigitalGlobe. The Rio geodatabase contains 12 datasets with 35 unique layers containing more than 120,000 individual points of interest. Increasing the diversity of geospatial data available in SpaceNet will enable machine learning to be applied to a wider range of use cases and applications. More information is available on CosmiQ Works’ blog, The DownLinQ.
The next phase of the SpaceNet Challenge will be a follow-on competition utilizing DigitalGlobe’s highest-resolution 30 cm imagery from WorldView-3 and building footprints across new locations around the globe. Developers will be challenged to improve performance from the first competition using the higher-resolution imagery and more geographically diverse training data samples. Further details of this challenge will be provided in the weeks ahead.
About DigitalGlobe
DigitalGlobe is a leading provider of commercial high-resolution earth observation and advanced geospatial solutions that help decision makers better understand our changing planet in order to save lives, resources and time. Sourced from the world's leading constellation, our imagery solutions deliver unmatched coverage and capacity to meet our customers' most demanding mission requirements. Each day customers in defense and intelligence, public safety, civil agencies, map making and analysis, environmental monitoring, oil and gas exploration, infrastructure management, navigation technology, and providers of location-based services depend on DigitalGlobe data, information, technology and expertise to gain actionable insight.
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