Thematic analysis — is the process of extracting information about the characteristics of various objects on the Earth's surface based on the analysis of spectral, spatial, and temporal data obtained using satellites, aerial photography, or other remote sensing sources.
Under thematic decoding, one should understand the decoding of anthropogenic and natural objects and their properties in order to create thematic maps. Thematic decoding is a very extensive and promising direction that covers the entire spectrum of geographical sciences (geology, geomorphology, geobotany, soil science, etc.).
Remote sensing thematic analysis has over 250 directions (updated annually), the basics are established by the UN division (UN Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA) and the "Principles relating to remote sensing of the Earth from space" Declaration (Adopted by resolution 41/65 of the General Assembly dated December 3, 1986).
Analysis of data obtained using remote sensing is widely used in areas such as geography, ecology, agriculture, urban planning, geology, geodesy, as well as in disaster monitoring, resource planning, and other areas. This method becomes an effective decision-making tool and provides important information about the Earth from space.
The content and purpose of decoding are to obtain a certain amount of qualitative and quantitative information about the state, composition, structure, sizes, interrelationships, and dynamics of processes, phenomena, and objects using decoding features.