CVJul 28, 2020

A Deep Learning-based Detector for Brown Spot Disease in Passion Fruit Plant Leaves

arXiv:2007.14103v25 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses crop disease detection for smallholder passion fruit farmers in Uganda and East Africa, but it is incremental as it applies existing deep learning methods to a new dataset.

The researchers tackled the problem of detecting brown spot and woodiness diseases in passion fruit plants using deep learning, achieving accurate diagnosis through a dataset collected from Uganda.

Pests and diseases pose a key challenge to passion fruit farmers across Uganda and East Africa in general. They lead to loss of investment as yields reduce and losses increases. As the majority of the farmers, including passion fruit farmers, in the country are smallholder farmers from low-income households, they do not have the sufficient information and means to combat these challenges. While, passion fruits have the potential to improve the well-being of these farmers as they have a short maturity period and high market value , without the required knowledge about the health of their crops, farmers cannot intervene promptly to turn the situation around. For this work, we have partnered with the Uganda National Crop Research Institute (NaCRRI) to develop a dataset of expertly labelled passion fruit plant leaves and fruits, both diseased and healthy. We have made use of their extension service to collect images from 5 districts in Uganda, With the dataset in place, we are employing state-of-the-art techniques in machine learning, and specifically deep learning, techniques at scale for object detection and classification to correctly determine the health status of passion fruit plants and provide an accurate diagnosis for positive detections.This work focuses on two major diseases woodiness (viral) and brown spot (fungal) diseases.

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