4.7 Article

The Detection of Kiwifruit Sunscald Using Spectral Reflectance Data Combined with Machine Learning and CNNs

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy13082137

Keywords

kiwifruit; sunscald; anthracnose; spectral reflectance; multilayer perceptron; random forests; support vector machine; convolutional neural network

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This study provides high-precision detection models and relevant spectral information for the detection of different states of kiwifruit affected by environmental stress. Through laboratory experiments, spectral reflectance data of kiwifruit leaves in four different states were collected and analyzed. Multiple modeling approaches were used to extract bands and evaluate the performance of the models. The study successfully achieved the detection of kiwifruit under different stages of environmental stress.
Sunscald in kiwifruit, an environmental stress caused by solar radiation during the summer, reduces fruit quality and yields and causes economic losses. The efficient and timely detection of sunscald and similar diseases is a challenging task but helps to implement measures to control stress. This study provides high-precision detection models and relevant spectral information on kiwifruit physiology for similar statuses, including early-stage sunscald, late-stage sunscald, anthracnose, and healthy. Primarily, in the laboratory, 429 groups of spectral reflectance data for leaves of four statuses were collected and analyzed using a hyperspectral reflection acquisition system. Then, multiple modeling approaches, including combined preprocessing methods, feature extraction algorithms, and classification algorithms, were designed to extract bands and evaluate the performance of the models to detect the statuses of kiwifruit. Finally, the detection of different stages of kiwifruit sunscald under anthracnose interference was accomplished. As influential bands, 694-713 nm, 758-777 nm, 780-799 nm, and 1303-1322 nm were extracted. The overall accuracy, precision, recall, and F1-score values of the models reached 100%, demonstrating an ability to detect all statuses with 100% accuracy. It was concluded that the combined processing of moving average and standard normal variable transformations (MS) could significantly improve the data; the near-infrared support vector machine and visible convolutional neural network with MS (NIR-MS-SVM and VIS-MS-CNN) were established as high-precision detection techniques for the classification of similar kiwifruit statuses, demonstrating 25.58% higher accuracy than the single support vector machine. The VIS-MS-CNN model reached convergence with a stable cross-entropy loss of 0.75 in training and 0.77 in validation. The techniques developed in this study will improve orchard management efficiency and yields and increase researchers' understanding of kiwifruit physiology.

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