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ARTIFICIAL MEDJOOL DATE FRUIT BUNCH IMAGE SYNTHESIS: TOWARDS THINNING AUTOMATION
Year:
2023
Source of publication :
Journal of the ASABE
Authors :
Bechar, Avital
;
.
Cohen, Yuval
;
.
Volume :
Co-Authors:
  • Bar-Shira, Or
  • Cohen, Yosef
  • Shoshan, Tal
  • Bechar, Avital
  • Sadowsky, Avraham
  • Cohen, Yuval
  • Berman, Sigal
Facilitators :
From page:
0
To page:
0
(
Total pages:
1
)
Abstract:

Medjool is a premium date cultivar, and the market demands high-quality fruits, for which specific horticultural practices, including timely and efficient fruitlet thinning, are required. Currently, thinning the fruitlets is one of the most labor-intensive tasks in the Medjool cultivation cycle, and there is a need to develop methods for automating the thinning process. An algorithm determining the required thinning is a prerequisite for advancing toward thinning automation. An annotated Medjool fruit bunch image dataset is necessary for developing such an algorithm using state-of-the-art machine learning methods. Acquiring such a dataset is difficult and costly. The difficulty can be alleviated by using synthetic images. However, current methods for generating synthetic plant images are unsuitable for Medjool dates due to their geometrical features. The current work suggests a method for generating artificial images of Medjool fruit bunches from a 3D model based on structural decomposition into plant parts and the use of Bezier curves. Nineteen model variables and their distributions were defined for fruit bunch model generation. The models and synthetic images generated based on the models were verified by two plant physiologists who are experts in Medjool date cultivation. Fruit-bunch features were extracted from the generated images and used for learning the required remaining length of the spikelets after thinning using kernel estimation. The estimation was tested for images of two whorl-period combinations (Top-Early and Middle-Middle). The average scaled absolute estimation errors for both periods were very low (less than 1%). © 2023 American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers.

Note:
Related Files :
Bezier curves
Kernel estimation
Medjool dates
Synthetic data
thinning
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More details
DOI :
10.13031/ja.15217
Article number:
0
Affiliations:
Database:
Scopus
Publication Type:
article
;
.
Language:
English
Editors' remarks:
ID:
64128
Last updated date:
15/05/2023 15:34
Creation date:
15/05/2023 15:08
Scientific Publication
ARTIFICIAL MEDJOOL DATE FRUIT BUNCH IMAGE SYNTHESIS: TOWARDS THINNING AUTOMATION
  • Bar-Shira, Or
  • Cohen, Yosef
  • Shoshan, Tal
  • Bechar, Avital
  • Sadowsky, Avraham
  • Cohen, Yuval
  • Berman, Sigal
ARTIFICIAL MEDJOOL DATE FRUIT BUNCH IMAGE SYNTHESIS: TOWARDS THINNING AUTOMATION

Medjool is a premium date cultivar, and the market demands high-quality fruits, for which specific horticultural practices, including timely and efficient fruitlet thinning, are required. Currently, thinning the fruitlets is one of the most labor-intensive tasks in the Medjool cultivation cycle, and there is a need to develop methods for automating the thinning process. An algorithm determining the required thinning is a prerequisite for advancing toward thinning automation. An annotated Medjool fruit bunch image dataset is necessary for developing such an algorithm using state-of-the-art machine learning methods. Acquiring such a dataset is difficult and costly. The difficulty can be alleviated by using synthetic images. However, current methods for generating synthetic plant images are unsuitable for Medjool dates due to their geometrical features. The current work suggests a method for generating artificial images of Medjool fruit bunches from a 3D model based on structural decomposition into plant parts and the use of Bezier curves. Nineteen model variables and their distributions were defined for fruit bunch model generation. The models and synthetic images generated based on the models were verified by two plant physiologists who are experts in Medjool date cultivation. Fruit-bunch features were extracted from the generated images and used for learning the required remaining length of the spikelets after thinning using kernel estimation. The estimation was tested for images of two whorl-period combinations (Top-Early and Middle-Middle). The average scaled absolute estimation errors for both periods were very low (less than 1%). © 2023 American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers.

Scientific Publication
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