56,699 research outputs found
A Rapidly Deployable Classification System using Visual Data for the Application of Precision Weed Management
In this work we demonstrate a rapidly deployable weed classification system
that uses visual data to enable autonomous precision weeding without making
prior assumptions about which weed species are present in a given field.
Previous work in this area relies on having prior knowledge of the weed species
present in the field. This assumption cannot always hold true for every field,
and thus limits the use of weed classification systems based on this
assumption. In this work, we obviate this assumption and introduce a rapidly
deployable approach able to operate on any field without any weed species
assumptions prior to deployment. We present a three stage pipeline for the
implementation of our weed classification system consisting of initial field
surveillance, offline processing and selective labelling, and automated
precision weeding. The key characteristic of our approach is the combination of
plant clustering and selective labelling which is what enables our system to
operate without prior weed species knowledge. Testing using field data we are
able to label 12.3 times fewer images than traditional full labelling whilst
reducing classification accuracy by only 14%.Comment: 36 pages, 14 figures, published Computers and Electronics in
Agriculture Vol. 14
Bottom-Up and Top-Down Reasoning with Hierarchical Rectified Gaussians
Convolutional neural nets (CNNs) have demonstrated remarkable performance in
recent history. Such approaches tend to work in a unidirectional bottom-up
feed-forward fashion. However, practical experience and biological evidence
tells us that feedback plays a crucial role, particularly for detailed spatial
understanding tasks. This work explores bidirectional architectures that also
reason with top-down feedback: neural units are influenced by both lower and
higher-level units.
We do so by treating units as rectified latent variables in a quadratic
energy function, which can be seen as a hierarchical Rectified Gaussian model
(RGs). We show that RGs can be optimized with a quadratic program (QP), that
can in turn be optimized with a recurrent neural network (with rectified linear
units). This allows RGs to be trained with GPU-optimized gradient descent. From
a theoretical perspective, RGs help establish a connection between CNNs and
hierarchical probabilistic models. From a practical perspective, RGs are well
suited for detailed spatial tasks that can benefit from top-down reasoning. We
illustrate them on the challenging task of keypoint localization under
occlusions, where local bottom-up evidence may be misleading. We demonstrate
state-of-the-art results on challenging benchmarks.Comment: To appear in CVPR 201
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