Abstract
A number of farmers use human inspection to classify the quality of their fruits visually; this process could be done automatically with a Learning algorithm. This paper investigates the classification of apples, peaches, and oranges and verifies the quality of classification with the density of the edges detected in each image by the Sobel filter. The novelty of the study consists of comparing the classification accuracy of a convolutional neural network (CNN) and the statistical analysis of edge histograms. The edges are the main elements of what the CNN learns; this was the reason for verifying the deep learning algorithms with skewness, kurtosis, and standard deviation metrics extracted from the histogram of edge density detected by the Sobel filter. In the empirical process, four algorithms were proposed: a CNN with one convolutional layer, a DNN without convolutional layers, and two pre-trained networks, AlexNet and GoogLeNet. From clustering of the row data and analyzing the accuracy, the best classification is obtained by simple CNN for 20 epochs when the apples vs. oranges were classified.
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