How Class Probability works

This ArcGIS 2.8 documentation has been archived and is no longer updated. Content and links may be outdated. See the latest documentation.

Available with Spatial Analyst license.

The Class Probability tool outputs a multiband raster. There is one band for each class or cluster in the input signature file. Each band stores the probability that a cell belongs to that class. This can be useful in merging classes after a classification is done.

If you find that some areas in your classification do not have a high probability for the class to which they are assigned, it could be indicative of a mixed class. An example of this is an area that is classified as forest but only has a 55 percent chance of belonging to the forest class, according to its class probability band. You find that the same area has a 40 percent chance of belonging to a grassland class. Clearly, the area does not belong to either the forest or grassland classes. It is most likely a mixed forest and grassland class. It is a good idea to check the results of a classification against the class probabilities generated with Class Probability.

Example

The following example shows the results of running the tool on a multiband raster that includes rasters for elevation, slope, land class, and soil type. A signature file was created to break the area covered by the raster into three classes of crops. Class Probability is used to create a three-band multiband raster.

  • Settings used in the Class Probability tool dialog:

    Input raster bands : envir_mbr

    Input signature file : crop3.gsg

    Output multiband raster : cropprob

    Maximum output value : {default}

    A priori probability weighting : EQUAL

    Input a priori probability file : {default}

Each band of the multiband shows the suitability for that type of crop.

Example suitability output
Example suitability output

Related topics


In this topic
  1. Example