Abstract

The colossal increase in environmental pollution and degradation, resulting in ecological imbalance, is an eye-catching concern in the contemporary era. Moreover, the proliferation in the development of smart cities across the globe necessitates the emergence of a robust smart waste management system for proper waste segregation based on its biodegradability. The present work investigates a novel approach for waste segregation for its effective recycling and disposal by utilizing a deep learning strategy. The YOLOv3 algorithm has been utilized in the Darknet neural network framework to train a self-made dataset. The network has been trained for 6 object classes (namely: cardboard, glass, metal, paper, plastic and organic waste). Moreover, for comparative assessment, the detection task has also been performed using YOLOv3-tiny to validate the competence of the YOLOv3 algorithm. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed YOLOv3 methodology yields satisfactory generalization capability for all the classes with a variety of waste items.

Highlights

  • The rapid explosion in industrialization, urbanization, and global population rate is an attention-grabbing concern, pertaining to environmental degradation

  • This paper presented a novel application of the YOLOv3 algorithm for waste segregation as an aid to strengthen smart urban waste segregation and management framework

  • The neural network was trained on a self-made dataset of 6437 images of urban waste products for the detection of six classes of waste items

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The rapid explosion in industrialization, urbanization, and global population rate is an attention-grabbing concern, pertaining to environmental degradation. Attributable to the existing environmental concerns and improper management of waste, the world encounters gargantuan deleterious effects on the economy, public health and, essentially, the environment. This has shifted the above-all focus towards the worldwide progression of smart cities for guaranteeing effective and smart urban waste management. According to the recent Indian government reports, the most common things that have been thrown in the garbage are paper, paper boxes, food, and glass [3] These things constitute more than 99.5% of total garbage collected, which clearly indicates that people throw dry and wet waste away together. The segregation of waste is, seeking attention from various researchers and academicians across the globe [4,5]

Motivation
Performance Parameter Indices
Recall
Loss Function
The Training
Performance Evaluation, Results and Discussion
Conclusions
India’s Trash Bomb
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call