WHAT started as a work experience placement for CSU students has ended with a better way to gather information about floods. Not only has it improved the accuracy of the flooding information, it has reduced the time required to obtain information from two days of work to two hours. Senior lecturer in information technology Dr David Tien said the Bachelor of Information Technology and Bachelor of Computer Science students were on work experience placements with the NSW Department of Customer Service (DCS) in Bathurst. The DCS is adjacent to the university in Panorama Avenue. READ ALSO: Bathurst's Tonilee wins at Charles Sturt University First Nations Success Awards "In 2021, DCS kindly sponsored nine Charles Sturt University students to carry out image processing projects using Amazon Web Services (AWS), a cloud-based computing and Aerial Imagery Project (API) platform," Dr Tien said. "I'm delighted the outcomes of these projects have been used by the NSW State Emergency Service (SES) to combat recent flood events in the state. "It is such an advantage for our students to have practical work placements during their studies which can also yield such immediate real-world applications to benefit our communities." SEE ALSO: Photos from Charles Sturt University's EngFest The CSU student team members were Adam Blewitt, Andrew Smith, Patrick Funnell, Cameron Nyberg, Darren Sheehan, Ian Blott, Regan Frank, Thomas Godfrey and Michael Senkic. Mr Blewitt said the result of the project was to provide DCS Spatial Services (a business unit within DCS) with several trained machine learning models ready for use in Geographic Information System (GIS) software to generate maps of flooded regions. In the wake of a flooding event, Spatial Services flies an aircraft over flood-affected regions to collect multiband (RGB and near-infrared) aerial images. These images are then passed to a specialist for processing, to stitch the images together and perform orthorectification, the process of turning an image of a curved surface into a flat one suitable for maps and removing distortion from aircraft motion. IN OTHER NEWS AROUND BATHURST: Mr Blewitt said that, previously, these images of the flooded region would then be passed onto multiple agencies such as the SES and Department of Primary Industries (DPI) for their own use. "Organisations would then manually review and extract geospatial information from these images, such as the boundary and size of the flooded area," he said. "This required significant time and expertise and delayed the ability of government departments to make informed decisions in the wake of a natural disaster." Mr Blewitt said the purpose of the AWS Aerial Imaging Project was to automate the process of extracting geospatial information of the floods using machine learning models, reducing the amount of time required to obtain such information from two days of work to two hours, improving the accuracy of the information, and consolidating work that was being duplicated across multiple government agencies. The CSU student team used images provided by Spatial Services of past flooding events in the Hawkesbury-Nepean (March 2021), Brewarrina (April 2021), and Lower Clarence (March 2021) to train machine learning models to perform semantic segmentation of the aerial flood images. "Semantic segmentation is the process of allocating each pixel in an image to one of several categories, the ultimate goal in this project being to isolate all pixels of the flood into a single category," Mr Blewitt said. "We experimented with several models, including convolutional neural networks, gaussian mixture models, and complex decision trees, each using different learning algorithms and methods to perform the same semantic segmentation task. "The models can be used on any flood, provided the appropriate near infrared aerial images have been taken." Spatial Services executive director Narelle Underwood said Spatial Services was pleased to be able to partner with CSU to support students undertaking a project with real world applications. "This collaboration provides the students with access to our subject matter experts across a range of areas, with the outcomes providing benefits for Spatial Services and the community," she said.