175 research outputs found

    Symptoms Based Image Predictive Analysis for Citrus Orchards Using Machine Learning Techniques: A Review

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    In Agriculture, orchards are the deciding factor in the country’s economy. There are many orchards, and citrus and sugarcane will cover 60 percent of them. These citrus orchards satisfy the necessity of citrus fruits and citrus products, and these citrus fruits contain more vitamin C. The citrus orchards have had some problems generating good yields and quality products. Pathogenic diseases, pests, and water shortages are the three main problems that plants face. Farmers can find these problems early on with the support of machine learning and deep learning, which may also change how they feel about technology.  By doing this in agriculture, the farmers can cut off the major issues of yield and quality losses. This review gives enormous methods for identifying and classifying plant pathogens, pests, and water stresses using image-based work. In this review, the researchers present detailed information about citrus pathogens, pests, and water deficits. Methods and techniques that are currently available will be used to validate the problem. These will include pre-processing for intensification, segmentation, feature extraction, and selection processes, machine learning-based classifiers, and deep learning models. In this work, researchers thoroughly examine and outline the various research opportunities in the field. This review provides a comprehensive analysis of citrus plants and orchards; Researchers used a systematic review to ensure comprehensive coverage of this topic

    Novel CropdocNet Model for Automated Potato Late Blight Disease Detection from Unmanned Aerial Vehicle-Based Hyperspectral Imagery

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    The accurate and automated diagnosis of potato late blight disease, one of the most destructive potato diseases, is critical for precision agricultural control and management. Recent advances in remote sensing and deep learning offer the opportunity to address this challenge. This study proposes a novel end-to-end deep learning model (CropdocNet) for accurate and automated late blight disease diagnosis from UAV-based hyperspectral imagery. The proposed method considers the potential disease-specific reflectance radiation variance caused by the canopy’s structural diversity and introduces multiple capsule layers to model the part-to-whole relationship between spectral– spatial features and the target classes to represent the rotation invariance of the target classes in the feature space. We evaluate the proposed method with real UAV-based HSI data under controlled and natural field conditions. The effectiveness of the hierarchical features is quantitatively assessed and compared with the existing representative machine learning/deep learning methods on both testing and independent datasets. The experimental results show that the proposed model significantly improves accuracy when considering the hierarchical structure of spectral–spatial features, with average accuracies of 98.09% for the testing dataset and 95.75% for the independent dataset, respectively

    Quantifying soybean phenotypes using UAV imagery and machine learning, deep learning methods

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    Crop breeding programs aim to introduce new cultivars to the world with improved traits to solve the food crisis. Food production should need to be twice of current growth rate to feed the increasing number of people by 2050. Soybean is one the major grain in the world and only US contributes around 35 percent of world soybean production. To increase soybean production, breeders still rely on conventional breeding strategy, which is mainly a 'trial and error' process. These constraints limit the expected progress of the crop breeding program. The goal was to quantify the soybean phenotypes of plant lodging and pubescence color using UAV-based imagery and advanced machine learning. Plant lodging and soybean pubescence color are two of the most important phenotypes for soybean breeding programs. Soybean lodging and pubescence color is conventionally evaluated visually by breeders, which is time-consuming and subjective to human errors. The goal of this study was to investigate the potential of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)-based imagery and machine learning in the assessment of lodging conditions and deep learning in the assessment pubescence color of soybean breeding lines. A UAV imaging system equipped with an RGB (red-green-blue) camera was used to collect the imagery data of 1,266 four-row plots in a soybean breeding field at the reproductive stage. Soybean lodging scores and pubescence scores were visually assessed by experienced breeders. Lodging scores were grouped into four classes, i.e., non-lodging, moderate lodging, high lodging, and severe lodging. In contrast, pubescence color scores were grouped into three classes, i.e., gray, tawny, and segregation. UAV images were stitched to build orthomosaics, and soybean plots were segmented using a grid method. Twelve image features were extracted from the collected images to assess the lodging scores of each breeding line. Four models, i.e., extreme gradient boosting (XGBoost), random forest (RF), K-nearest neighbor (KNN), and artificial neural network (ANN), were evaluated to classify soybean lodging classes. Five data pre-processing methods were used to treat the imbalanced dataset to improve the classification accuracy. Results indicate that the pre-processing method SMOTE-ENN consistently performs well for all four (XGBoost, RF, KNN, and ANN) classifiers, achieving the highest overall accuracy (OA), lowest misclassification, higher F1-score, and higher Kappa coefficient. This suggests that Synthetic Minority Over-sampling-Edited Nearest Neighbor (SMOTE-ENN) may be an excellent pre-processing method for using unbalanced datasets and classification tasks. Furthermore, an overall accuracy of 96 percent was obtained using the SMOTE-ENN dataset and ANN classifier. On the other hand, to classify the soybean pubescence color, seven pre-trained deep learning models, i.e., DenseNet121, DenseNet169, DenseNet201, ResNet50, InceptionResNet-V2, Inception-V3, and EfficientNet were used, and images of each plot were fed into the model. Data was enhanced using two rotational and two scaling factors to increase the datasets. Among the seven pre-trained deep learning models, ResNet50 and DenseNet121 classifiers showed a higher overall accuracy of 88 percent, along with higher precision, recall, and F1-score for all three classes of pubescence color. In conclusion, the developed UAV-based high-throughput phenotyping system can gather image features to estimate soybean crucial phenotypes and classify the phenotypes, which will help the breeders in phenotypic variations in breeding trials. Also, the RGB imagery-based classification could be a cost-effective choice for breeders and associated researchers for plant breeding programs in identifying superior genotypes.Includes bibliographical references

    Review on Active and Passive Remote Sensing Techniques for Road Extraction

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    Digital maps of road networks are a vital part of digital cities and intelligent transportation. In this paper, we provide a comprehensive review on road extraction based on various remote sensing data sources, including high-resolution images, hyperspectral images, synthetic aperture radar images, and light detection and ranging. This review is divided into three parts. Part 1 provides an overview of the existing data acquisition techniques for road extraction, including data acquisition methods, typical sensors, application status, and prospects. Part 2 underlines the main road extraction methods based on four data sources. In this section, road extraction methods based on different data sources are described and analysed in detail. Part 3 presents the combined application of multisource data for road extraction. Evidently, different data acquisition techniques have unique advantages, and the combination of multiple sources can improve the accuracy of road extraction. The main aim of this review is to provide a comprehensive reference for research on existing road extraction technologies.Peer reviewe

    A brief study on rice diseases recognition and image classification: fusion deep belief network and S-particle swarm optimization algorithm

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    In the regions of southern Andhra Pradesh, rice brown spot, rice blast, and rice sheath blight have emerged as the most prevalent diseases. The goal of this research is to increase the precision and effectiveness of disease diagnosis by proposing a framework for the automated recognition and classification of rice diseases. Therefore, this work proposes a hybrid approach with multiple stages. Initially, the region of interest (ROI) is extracted from the dataset and test images. Then, the multiple features are extracted, such as color-moment-based features, grey-level cooccurrence matrix (GLCM)-based texture, and shape features. Then, the S-particle swarm optimization (SPSO) model selects the best features from the extracted features. Moreover, the deep belief network (DBN) model trained by SPSO is based on optimal features, which classify the different types of rice diseases. The SPSO algorithm also optimized the losses generated in the DBN model. The suggested model achieves a hit rate of 94.85% and an accuracy of 97.48% with the 10-fold cross-validation approach. The traditional machine learning (ML) model is significantly less accurate than the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), which has an accuracy of 97.48%

    Computer Vision Based Machine Learning and Deep Learning Approaches for Identification of Nutrient Deficiency in Crops: A Survey

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    Agriculture is a significant industry that plays a major role in a country’s sustainable environment and economic development. The global population demands increased food production with minimal losses. Nutrient deficiency is one of the major and crucial factors influencing crop production significantly. Common techniques for determining crop nutrition status are the diagnosis of plant morphology, Enzymology, chemical effects, fertilization, etc. However, the above techniques are invasive and time-consuming or infeasible while considering varied production practices in different locations, environments and climatic conditions. Computer Vision is an area of Computer Science that deals with creating Artificial Intelligence based vision systems that can use image data, process, and analyze as humans perform. Early Detection of Crop Nutrient deficiencies favors the farmers to monitor the affected crops and plan for the manure or fertilizer application, which supports to regain of the crop’s efficiency for attaining its maximum yield. Modern computer vision systems rely on Machine Learning (ML), Remote sensing, Satellite imagery, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), Internet of things (IoT) based sensor devices, and Deep Learning (DL) models that use algorithms to extract required features from data. The objective of this work is to provide an overview of recent research and identify the scope of computer vision-based technologies used for identifying crop nutrient content and deficiency, find research challenges in predicting nutrient imbalance in comparison with plant diseases that show certain similar characteristics, thereby to improve crop health and production

    Research Naval Postgraduate School, v.13, no.1, February 2003

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    NPS Research is published by the Research and Sponsored Programs, Office of the Vice President and Dean of Research, in accordance with NAVSOP-35. Views and opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the Department of the Navy.Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited
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