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Investigation to answer three key questions concerning plant pest identification and development of a practical identification framework.

Authors :
Wayama, Ryosuke
Sasaki, Yuki
Kagiwada, Satoshi
Iwasaki, Nobusuke
Iyatomi, Hitoshi
Source :
Computers & Electronics in Agriculture. Jul2024, Vol. 222, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The development of practical and robust automated diagnostic systems for identifying plant pests is crucial for efficient agricultural production. In this paper, we first investigate three key research questions (RQs) that have not been addressed thus far in the field of image-based plant pest identification. Based on the knowledge gained, we then develop an accurate, robust, and fast plant pest identification framework using 334K images comprising 78 combinations of four plant portions (the leaf front, leaf back, fruit, and flower of cucumber, tomato, strawberry, and eggplant) and 20 pest species captured at 27 farms. The results reveal the following. (1) For an appropriate evaluation of the model, the test data should not include images of the field from which the training images were collected, or other considerations to increase the diversity of the test set should be taken into account. (2) Pre-extraction of ROIs, such as leaves and fruits, helps to improve identification accuracy. (3) Integration of closely related species using the same control methods and cross-crop training methods for the same pests, are effective. Our two-stage plant pest identification framework, enabling ROI detection and convolutional neural network (CNN)-based identification, achieved a highly practical performance of 91.0% and 88.5% in mean accuracy and macro F1 score, respectively, for 12,223 instances of test data of 21 classes collected from unseen fields, where 25 classes of images from 318,971 samples were used for training; the average identification time was 476 ms/image. • Development of an accurate and practical framework for plant pest identification. • Evaluation of the model requires images, such as those collected elsewhere. • Foreground extraction significantly improves pest discrimination performance. • Class integration and cross-crop training boosts model performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01681699
Volume :
222
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Computers & Electronics in Agriculture
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177880322
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compag.2024.109021