1. Comparison of Different Classifiers and the Majority Voting Rule for the Detection of Plum Fruits in Garden Conditions
- Author
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Razieh Pourdarbani, Sajad Sabzi, Mario Hernández-Hernández, José Luis Hernández-Hernández, Ginés García-Mateos, Davood Kalantari, and José Miguel Molina-Martínez
- Subjects
remote sensing in agriculture ,artificial neural network hybridization ,environmental conditions ,majority voting ,plum segmentation ,Science - Abstract
Color segmentation is one of the most thoroughly studied problems in agricultural applications of remote image capture systems, since it is the key step in several different tasks, such as crop harvesting, site specific spraying, and targeted disease control under natural light. This paper studies and compares five methods to segment plum fruit images under ambient conditions at 12 different light intensities, and an ensemble method combining them. In these methods, several color features in different color spaces are first extracted for each pixel, and then the most effective features are selected using a hybrid approach of artificial neural networks and the cultural algorithm (ANN-CA). The features selected among the 38 defined channels were the b* channel of L*a*b*, and the color purity index, C*, from L*C*h. Next, fruit/background segmentation is performed using five classifiers: artificial neural network-imperialist competitive algorithm (ANN-ICA); hybrid artificial neural network-harmony search (ANN-HS); support vector machines (SVM); k nearest neighbors (kNN); and linear discriminant analysis (LDA). In the ensemble method, the final class for each pixel is determined using the majority voting method. The experiments showed that the correct classification rate for the majority voting method excluding LDA was 98.59%, outperforming the results of the constituent methods.
- Published
- 2019
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