Abstract

Rice density is closely related to yield estimation, growth diagnosis, cultivated area statistics, and management and damage evaluation. Currently, rice density estimation heavily relies on manual sampling and counting, which is inefficient and inaccurate. With the prevalence of digital imagery, computer vision (CV) technology emerges as a promising alternative to automate this task. However, challenges of an in-field environment, such as illumination, scale, and appearance variations, render gaps for deploying CV methods. To fill these gaps towards accurate rice density estimation, we propose a deep learning-based approach called the Scale-Fusion Counting Classification Network (SFC2Net) that integrates several state-of-the-art computer vision ideas. In particular, SFC2Net addresses appearance and illumination changes by employing a multicolumn pretrained network and multilayer feature fusion to enhance feature representation. To ameliorate sample imbalance engendered by scale, SFC2Net follows a recent blockwise classification idea. We validate SFC2Net on a new rice plant counting (RPC) dataset collected from two field sites in China from 2010 to 2013. Experimental results show that SFC2Net achieves highly accurate counting performance on the RPC dataset with a mean absolute error (MAE) of 25.51, a root mean square error (MSE) of 38.06, a relative MAE of 3.82%, and a R2 of 0.98, which exhibits a relative improvement of 48.2% w.r.t. MAE over the conventional counting approach CSRNet. Further, SFC2Net provides high-throughput processing capability, with 16.7 frames per second on 1024 × 1024 images. Our results suggest that manual rice counting can be safely replaced by SFC2Net at early growth stages. Code and models are available online at https://git.io/sfc2net.

Highlights

  • Plant counting is a fundamental task in agriculture

  • We evaluate our method on a middle-scale rice plant counting (RPC) dataset, which includes 382 high-resolution images

  • We make the following contributions: (i) We integrate several successful object counting ideas and present a novel deep learning-based rice counting approach, SFC2Net, for rice density estimation (ii) We introduce a new rice plant counting (RPC) dataset with dotted manual annotations

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Summary

Introduction

Plant counting is a fundamental task in agriculture. It is an important index for crop growth monitoring. The total number of maize tassels determines whether maize plants step into the tasseling stage [1]. The number of root nodules is an indicator of the health status of soybean [2]. The dynamics of the pest population [3] benefits pest forecasting. Knowing the condition of the weeds helps farmers to spray herbicide and to optimize its use [4]. Many counting results are closely related to the crop yield, such as the number of wheat ears per unit ground area (ear density) [5, 6] and the number of fruits [7]

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