3.8 Proceedings Paper

Development of a Mobile Robotic Phenotyping System for Growth Chamber-based Studies of Genotype x Environment Interactions

Journal

IFAC PAPERSONLINE
Volume 49, Issue 16, Pages 248-253

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ifacol.2016.10.046

Keywords

3D Reconstruction; Phenotyping; Mobile robots; Robot arm; Robot probing; Growth chamber

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To increase understanding of the interaction between phenotype and genotype x environment to improve crop performance, large amounts of phenotypic data arc needed. Studying plants of a given strain under multiple environments can greatly help to reveal their interactions. To collect the labor-intensive data required to perform experiments in this area, a Mecanum-wheeled, magnetic-tape-following indoor rover has been developed to accurately and autonomously move between and inside growth chambers. Integration of the motor controllers, a robot ann, and a Microsoft Kinect (0) 3D sensor was achieved in a customized C++ program. Detecting and segmenting plants in a multi-plant environment is a challenging task, which can be aided by integration of depth data into these algorithms. Image-processing functions were implemented to filter the depth image to minimize noise and remove undesired surfaces, reducing the memory requirement and allowing the plant to be reconstructed at a higher resolution in real-time. Threedimensional meshes representing plants inside the chamber were reconstructed using the Kinect SDK's KinectFusion. After transforming user-selected points in camera coordinates to robot-arm coordinates, the robot arm is used in conjunction with the rover to probe desired leaves, simulating the future use of sensors such as a fluorimeter and Raman spectrometer. This paper reports the system architecture and some preliminary results of the system. (C) 2016. IFAC (International Federation of Automatic control) Hosting Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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