Abstract

Target detection technology based on unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)-derived aerial imagery has been widely applied in the field of forest fire patrol and rescue. However, due to the specificity of UAV platforms, there are still significant issues to be resolved such as severe omission, low detection accuracy, and poor early warning effectiveness. In light of these issues, this paper proposes an improved YOLOX network for the rapid detection of forest fires in images captured by UAVs. Firstly, to enhance the network's feature-extraction capability in complex fire environments, a multi-level-feature-extraction structure, CSP-ML, is designed to improve the algorithm's detection accuracy for small-target fire areas. Additionally, a CBAM attention mechanism is embedded in the neck network to reduce interference caused by background noise and irrelevant information. Secondly, an adaptive-feature-extraction module is introduced in the YOLOX network's feature fusion part to prevent the loss of important feature information during the fusion process, thus enhancing the network's feature-learning capability. Lastly, the CIoU loss function is used to replace the original loss function, to address issues such as excessive optimization of negative samples and poor gradient-descent direction, thereby strengthening the network's effective recognition of positive samples. Experimental results show that the improved YOLOX network has better detection performance, with mAP@50 and mAP@50_95 increasing by 6.4% and 2.17%, respectively, compared to the traditional YOLOX network. In multi-target flame and small-target flame scenarios, the improved YOLO model achieved a mAP of 96.3%, outperforming deep learning algorithms such as FasterRCNN, SSD, and YOLOv5 by 33.5%, 7.7%, and 7%, respectively. It has a lower omission rate and higher detection accuracy, and it is capable of handling small-target detection tasks in complex fire environments. This can provide support for UAV patrol and rescue applications from a high-altitude perspective.

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