Abstract

Plastic products' widespread applications and their non-biodegradable nature have resulted in the continuous accumulation of microplastic waste, emerging as a significant component of ecological environmental issues. In the field of microplastic detection, the intricate morphology poses challenges in achieving rapid visual characterization of microplastics. In this study, photoacoustic imaging technology is initially employed to capture high-resolution images of diverse microplastic samples. To address the limited dataset issue, an automated data processing pipeline is designed to obtain sample masks while effectively expanding the dataset size. Additionally, we propose Vqdp2, a generative deep learning model with multiple proxy tasks, for predicting six forms of microplastics data. By simultaneously constraining model parameters through two training modes, outstanding morphological category representations are achieved. The results demonstrate Vqdp2's excellent performance in classification accuracy and feature extraction by leveraging the advantages of multi-task training. This research is expected to be attractive for the detection classification and visual characterization of microplastics.

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