About This Project
Flooding affects ~1.81 billion people worldwide, rising with urban growth. Flood patterns and impacts differ across locations due to varying geography and severity. Deucalion and Pyrrha datasets enable AI to detect flooded areas, wet surfaces, damages, vehicles and people in photos. Expanding them with geographically diverse images is expected to improve AI accuracy and effectiveness, enhancing disaster response by sourcing from thousands of social media posts and protecting lives and property.
Ask the Scientists
Join The DiscussionWhat is the context of this research?
Accurate detection of flood-related objects in social media photos has become a major focus in disaster management research in recent years. Can AI models accurately identify and extract these objects while ensuring user privacy? Flood events produce complex and highly variable scenes, whereas past research focused mostly on simpler and more uniform images. We hypothesize that AI models trained on geographically diverse flood images from multiple locations can accurately detect flooded areas, damages, vehicles, and people, extracting only flood-relevant information, while not processing any personally identifiable data, including facial features or other sensitive elements. Analyzing hundreds or thousands of such images—especially with location data—can provide valuable, actionable insights for scientists, authorities, and emergency responders, supporting more effective disaster management.
What is the significance of this project?
Floods are increasingly frequent, and timely, accurate information is crucial for effective disaster management. This project expands the Deucalion and Pyrrha flood image datasets, enhancing AI models’ ability to detect flooded areas, wet surfaces, damages, vehicles, and people in complex and variable real-world scenarios. By providing geographically diverse, quality flood images, the datasets enable scientists, authorities, and emergency responders to train and validate object-detection models for rapid response. Any public disaster management agency worldwide can use these datasets to develop their own models and integrate the resulting data into operational workflows, supporting faster, data-driven decision-making and improved protection of lives and property. Additionally, the datasets can serve as a benchmarking tool for evaluating the performance of new research models, facilitating reproducibility and progress in the field -accessible to any scientist or researcher globally.
What are the goals of the project?
The main goals of the project are related to the expansion of Deucalion and Pyrrha flood image datasets, in terms of volume of photos for both datasets, and in terms of volume of extracted masks respectively. Moreover, even the classification schema of Pyrrha v1.0 is advanced, including 20 different categories, the v2.0 will also include categories that can be more compatible to practical flood models like e.g. flood level.
Target for Deucalion v2.0 is 60,000–70,000 photos (a roughly sixfold
increase from 10,240 in v1.0), half of them related to various flood
events. Target for Pyrrha v2.0 is 8,000–9,000 photos (a roughly fourfold
increase from 2,004 in v1.0) and 45,000–55,000 objects (a roughly
fivefold increase from 11,393 in v1.0).
Budget
The requested funding of $2,960 will cover hardware, dissemination, publication, and collaborator costs. About $130–180 will go to computer hardware and setup, including motherboard, CPU, RAM, cooling components, a refurbished monitor, and mouse, while the existing midi ATX tower, AMD GPU, SSD, and keyboard are already in place. Around $750 is allocated for conference registration and dissemination, and $800-900 for journal publication fees. From the remaining $1200, about $500-550 will cover operational expenses, including electricity, internet, shared office costs, accounting, and maintenance of existing equipment, while the remaining $600-650 is planned for small stipends to collaborators assisting with dataset quality checks, management, and papers, as well as platform fees and exchange rate costs. Version 1.0 of Deucalion and Pyrrha is peer-reviewed; v2.0 is funded through this request. All dataset versions will remain free to access. Travel and airfare are not included.
Endorsed by
Project Timeline
The project starts with setting up the server, while images will be seeked from social media sources, internet etc. Segments will be generated in label studio after updating the classification schema. Until July 2026 the expansion of both datasets will be completed. Research will be disseminated in one conference,and one journal. Deucalion and Pyrrha flood image datasets v2.0 will be online for all stakeholders.
Oct 18, 2025
Equipment preparation
Dec 04, 2025
Project Launched
Apr 30, 2026
Image acquisition
Jun 30, 2026
Label studio processing
Jul 31, 2026
Testing model training, fine tuning
Meet the Team
Affiliates
Dr. Stathis G. Arapostathis
Stathis G. Arapostathis was born in Athens, Greece, on September 1st, 1984. At the age of 18 he moved to Mytilene, on the island of Lesvos, where he studied Geography at the University of the Aegean. He later pursued both his MSc and PhD at the Department of Geography, Harokopio University in Athens, (November 2015) specializing in Geo-Informatics and, subsequently, in the use of Social Media for natural disasters.
His research interests revolve around the intersection of Social Networks and Science, His broader interests span Social Media, Crisis management, Machine Learning, education and Tourism Geography. He is researcher at self owned a little map. Since 2018, he has published a plethora of papers in reputed conferences and journals regarding disaster management, and flood management by utilizing social networks.
Alongside his extensive research background, he has working experience as an employee in private local and international companies, while through a little map he started and maintained various local and international collaborations. He has also been teaching in secondary education (Gymnasium) in Greece, since 2023. His total professional experience is more than 14 years. He has already created the v1.0 of Deucalion and Pyrrha datasets.
His publications regarding disaster management have been included among other, in the Disaster Information Reference Library.
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