Abstract

The value of grape cultivars varies. The use of a mixture of cultivars can negate the benefits of improved cultivars and hamper the protection of genetic resources and the identification of new hybrid cultivars. Classifying cultivars based on their leaves is therefore highly practical. Transplanted grape seedlings take years to bear fruit, but leaves mature in months. Foliar morphology differs among cultivars, so identifying cultivars based on leaves is feasible. Different cultivars, however, can be bred from the same parents, so the leaves of some cultivars can have similar morphologies. In this work, a pyramid residual convolution neural network was developed to classify images of eleven grape cultivars. The model extracts multi-scale feature maps of the leaf images through the convolution layer and enters them into three residual convolution neural networks. Features are fused by adding the value of the convolution kernel feature matrix to enhance the attention on the edge and center regions of the leaves and classify the images. The results indicated that the average accuracy of the model was 92.26% for the proposed leaf dataset. The proposed model is superior to previous models and provides a reliable method for the fine-grained classification and identification of plant cultivars. Keywords: fine-grained classification, grape cultivars identification, pyramid residual network, convolution neural network DOI: 10.25165/j.ijabe.20221502.6894 Citation: Li H H, Wei Y N, Zhang H M, Chen H, Meng J F. Fine-grained classification of grape leaves via a pyramid residual convolution neural network. Int J Agric & Biol Eng, 2022; 15(2): 197–203.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

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