4.6 Article

Node Detection and Internode Length Estimation of Tomato Seedlings Based on Image Analysis and Machine Learning

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 16, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s16071044

Keywords

node detection; internode length estimation; image analysis; machine learning; BoVWs; affinity propagation

Funding

  1. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries of Japan [NGB-3002, NGB-3003]
  2. CREST Program Knowledge Discovery by Constructing AgriBigData, Japan Science and Technology Agency
  3. GCL program of the University of Tokyo

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Seedling vigor in tomatoes determines the quality and growth of fruits and total plant productivity. It is well known that the salient effects of environmental stresses appear on the internode length; the length between adjoining main stem node (henceforth called node). In this study, we develop a method for internode length estimation using image processing technology. The proposed method consists of three steps: node detection, node order estimation, and internode length estimation. This method has two main advantages: (i) as it uses machine learning approaches for node detection, it does not require adjustment of threshold values even though seedlings are imaged under varying timings and lighting conditions with complex backgrounds; and (ii) as it uses affinity propagation for node order estimation, it can be applied to seedlings with different numbers of nodes without prior provision of the node number as a parameter. Our node detection results show that the proposed method can detect 72% of the 358 nodes in time-series imaging of three seedlings (recall = 0.72, precision = 0.78). In particular, the application of a general object recognition approach, Bag of Visual Words (BoVWs), enabled the elimination of many false positives on leaves occurring in the image segmentation based on pixel color, significantly improving the precision. The internode length estimation results had a relative error of below 15.4%. These results demonstrate that our method has the ability to evaluate the vigor of tomato seedlings quickly and accurately.

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