Bronson Philippa

CV
h-index32
5papers
506citations
Novelty34%
AI Score24

5 Papers

CVOct 19, 2023
WeedCLR: Weed Contrastive Learning through Visual Representations with Class-Optimized Loss in Long-Tailed Datasets

Alzayat Saleh, Alex Olsen, Jake Wood et al.

Image classification is a crucial task in modern weed management and crop intervention technologies. However, the limited size, diversity, and balance of existing weed datasets hinder the development of deep learning models for generalizable weed identification. In addition, the expensive labelling requirements of mainstream fully-supervised weed classifiers make them cost- and time-prohibitive to deploy widely, for new weed species, and in site-specific weed management. This paper proposes a novel method for Weed Contrastive Learning through visual Representations (WeedCLR), that uses class-optimized loss with Von Neumann Entropy of deep representation for weed classification in long-tailed datasets. WeedCLR leverages self-supervised learning to learn rich and robust visual features without any labels and applies a class-optimized loss function to address the class imbalance problem in long-tailed datasets. WeedCLR is evaluated on two public weed datasets: CottonWeedID15, containing 15 weed species, and DeepWeeds, containing 8 weed species. WeedCLR achieves an average accuracy improvement of 4.3\% on CottonWeedID15 and 5.6\% on DeepWeeds over previous methods. It also demonstrates better generalization ability and robustness to different environmental conditions than existing methods without the need for expensive and time-consuming human annotations. These significant improvements make WeedCLR an effective tool for weed classification in long-tailed datasets and allows for more rapid and widespread deployment of site-specific weed management and crop intervention technologies.

CVMar 13, 2024
FieldNet: Efficient Real-Time Shadow Removal for Enhanced Vision in Field Robotics

Alzayat Saleh, Alex Olsen, Jake Wood et al.

Shadows significantly hinder computer vision tasks in outdoor environments, particularly in field robotics, where varying lighting conditions complicate object detection and localisation. We present FieldNet, a novel deep learning framework for real-time shadow removal, optimised for resource-constrained hardware. FieldNet introduces a probabilistic enhancement module and a novel loss function to address challenges of inconsistent shadow boundary supervision and artefact generation, achieving enhanced accuracy and simplicity without requiring shadow masks during inference. Trained on a dataset of 10,000 natural images augmented with synthetic shadows, FieldNet outperforms state-of-the-art methods on benchmark datasets (ISTD, ISTD+, SRD), with up to $9$x speed improvements (66 FPS on Nvidia 2080Ti) and superior shadow removal quality (PSNR: 38.67, SSIM: 0.991). Real-world case studies in precision agriculture robotics demonstrate the practical impact of FieldNet in enhancing weed detection accuracy. These advancements establish FieldNet as a robust, efficient solution for real-time vision tasks in field robotics and beyond.

CVMay 12, 2024
Semi-Supervised Weed Detection for Rapid Deployment and Enhanced Efficiency

Alzayat Saleh, Alex Olsen, Jake Wood et al.

Weeds present a significant challenge in agriculture, causing yield loss and requiring expensive control measures. Automatic weed detection using computer vision and deep learning offers a promising solution. However, conventional deep learning methods often require large amounts of labelled training data, which can be costly and time-consuming to acquire. This paper introduces a novel method for semi-supervised weed detection, comprising two main components. Firstly, a multi-scale feature representation technique is employed to capture distinctive weed features across different scales. Secondly, we propose an adaptive pseudo-label assignment strategy, leveraging a small set of labelled images during training. This strategy dynamically assigns confidence scores to pseudo-labels generated from unlabeled data. Additionally, our approach integrates epoch-corresponding and mixed pseudo-labels to further enhance the learning process. Experimental results on the COCO dataset and five prominent weed datasets -- CottonWeedDet12, CropAndWeed, Palmer amaranth, RadishWheat, and RoboWeedMap -- illustrate that our method achieves state-of-the-art performance in weed detection, even with significantly less labelled data compared to existing techniques. This approach holds the potential to alleviate the labelling burden and enhance the feasibility and deployment speed of deep learning for weed detection in real-world agricultural scenarios.

SEJun 2, 2019
A Survey of Asynchronous Programming Using Coroutines in the Internet of Things and Embedded Systems

Bruce Belson, Jason Holdsworth, Wei Xiang et al.

Many Internet of Things and embedded projects are event-driven, and therefore require asynchronous and concurrent programming. Current proposals for C++20 suggest that coroutines will have native language support. It is timely to survey the current use of coroutines in embedded systems development. This paper investigates existing research which uses or describes coroutines on resource-constrained platforms. The existing research is analysed with regard to: software platform, hardware platform and capacity; use cases and intended benefits; and the application programming interface design used for coroutines. A systematic mapping study was performed, to select studies published between 2007 and 2018 which contained original research into the application of coroutines on resource-constrained platforms. An initial set of 566 candidate papers were reduced to only 35 after filters were applied, revealing the following taxonomy. The C & C++ programming languages were used by 22 studies out of 35. As regards hardware, 16 studies used 8- or 16-bit processors while 13 used 32-bit processors. The four most common use cases were concurrency (17 papers), network communication (15), sensor readings (9) and data flow (7). The leading intended benefits were code style and simplicity (12 papers), scheduling (9) and efficiency (8). A wide variety of techniques have been used to implement coroutines, including native macros, additional tool chain steps, new language features and non-portable assembly language. We conclude that there is widespread demand for coroutines on resource-constrained devices. Our findings suggest that there is significant demand for a formalised, stable, well-supported implementation of coroutines in C++, designed with consideration of the special needs of resource-constrained devices, and further that such an implementation would bring benefits specific to such devices.

CVOct 9, 2018
DeepWeeds: A Multiclass Weed Species Image Dataset for Deep Learning

Alex Olsen, Dmitry A. Konovalov, Bronson Philippa et al.

Robotic weed control has seen increased research of late with its potential for boosting productivity in agriculture. Majority of works focus on developing robotics for croplands, ignoring the weed management problems facing rangeland stock farmers. Perhaps the greatest obstacle to widespread uptake of robotic weed control is the robust classification of weed species in their natural environment. The unparalleled successes of deep learning make it an ideal candidate for recognising various weed species in the complex rangeland environment. This work contributes the first large, public, multiclass image dataset of weed species from the Australian rangelands; allowing for the development of robust classification methods to make robotic weed control viable. The DeepWeeds dataset consists of 17,509 labelled images of eight nationally significant weed species native to eight locations across northern Australia. This paper presents a baseline for classification performance on the dataset using the benchmark deep learning models, Inception-v3 and ResNet-50. These models achieved an average classification accuracy of 95.1% and 95.7%, respectively. We also demonstrate real time performance of the ResNet-50 architecture, with an average inference time of 53.4 ms per image. These strong results bode well for future field implementation of robotic weed control methods in the Australian rangelands.