Abstract

The introduction of sophisticated waste treatment plants is making the process of trash sorting and recycling more and more effective and eco-friendly. Studies on Automated Waste Sorting (AWS) are greatly contributing to making the whole recycling process more efficient. However, a relevant issue, which remains unsolved, is how to deal with the large amount of waste that is littered in the environment instead of being collected properly. In this paper, we introduce BackRep: a method for building waste recognizers that can be used for identifying and sorting littered waste directly where it is found. BackRep consists of a data-augmentation procedure, which expands existing datasets by cropping solid waste in images taken on a uniform (white) background and superimposing it on more realistic backgrounds. For our purpose, realistic backgrounds are those representing places where solid waste is usually littered. To experiment with our data-augmentation procedure, we produced a new dataset in realistic settings. We observed that waste recognizers trained on augmented data actually outperform those trained on existing datasets. Hence, our data-augmentation procedure seems a viable approach to support the development of waste recognizers for urban and wild environments.

Highlights

  • Even though sorting and recycling efficiencies are improved by augmenting modern waste treatment plants, another problem is arising

  • Experiments aim to investigate if our technique of Background Replacement (BackRep) for data augmentation helps in adapting conveyor-belt-oriented

  • We presented background replacement (BackRep), namely a model to adapt existing Automated Waste Sorting (AWS) systems to be used for littered waste

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Summary

Introduction

Even though sorting and recycling efficiencies are improved by augmenting modern waste treatment plants, another problem is arising. More and more waste is being littered in the environment instead of being collected properly. Oceans are full of plastic debris [1,2], which is spoiling the beauty of coasts [3]. Even if this is a huge problem for oceans, it becomes gigantic for land. It seems that the presence of macro-plastic debris in soil is 40 times bigger than in the oceans [4]. The COVID-19 pandemic has made waste management even more challenging, due to uncontrolled increase of household waste during lockdown [5]

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