Abstract

ABSTRACTThe basis of aerobiological studies is to monitor airborne pollen concentrations and pollen season timing. This task is performed by appropriately trained staff and is difficult and time consuming. The goal of this research is to select morphological characteristics of grains that are the most discriminative for distinguishing between birch, hazel and alder taxa and are easy to determine automatically from microscope images. This selection is based on the split attributes of the J4.8 classification trees built for different subsets of features. Determining the discriminative features by this method, we provide specific rules for distinguishing between individual taxa, at the same time obtaining a high percentage of correct classification. The most discriminative among the 13 morphological characteristics studied are the following: number of pores, maximum axis, minimum axis, axes difference, maximum oncus width, and number of lateral pores. The classification result of the tree based on this subset is better than the one built on the whole feature set and it is almost 94%. Therefore, selection of attributes before tree building is recommended. The classification results for the features easiest to obtain from the image, i.e. maximum axis, minimum axis, axes difference, and number of lateral pores, are only 2.09 pp lower than those obtained for the complete set, but 3.23 pp lower than the results obtained for the selected most discriminating attributes only.

Highlights

  • The basis of aerobiological studies is to monitor airborne pollen in order to determine the abundance of pollen and pollen season timing

  • For 69 out of 75 pollen grains of this taxon, the values of the above-mentioned attribute were greater than 24.39 μm for the maximum axis and 22.24 μm for the minimum axis

  • Our research was focused on the taxa discrimination part of the pollen monitoring system

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Summary

Introduction

The basis of aerobiological studies is to monitor airborne pollen in order to determine the abundance of pollen and pollen season timing. This is primarily associated with the continually increasing number of people suffering from airborne allergies (Heinrich, 2002). Recent research shows that in Poland over 45% of its inhabitants suffer from various allergies (Samoliński et al, 2014). The main sources of allergens include pollen grains (Holgate et al, 2001). In the case of Poland, in spring it is birch pollen that shows the strongest allergenic properties (Rapiejko, 2008; Piotrowska and Kubik-Komar, 2012).

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