FabricNet: A Fiber Recognition Architecture Using Ensemble ConvNets
This work addresses a domain-specific problem for textile industry and individual users by offering a faster, image-based alternative to traditional chemical and microscopic tests, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing CNN architectures.
The paper tackled the problem of textile fiber identification by proposing FabricNet, an ensemble convolutional neural network architecture that uses surface images of fabric to recognize 50 different fiber types, achieving 84% accuracy and 90% F1-score.
Fabric is a planar material composed of textile fibers. Textile fibers are generated from many natural sources; including plants, animals, minerals, and even, it can be synthetic. A particular fabric may contain different types of fibers that pass through a complex production process. Fiber identification is usually carried out through chemical tests and microscopic tests. However, these testing processes are complicated as well as time-consuming. We propose FabricNet, a pioneering approach for the image-based textile fiber recognition system, which may have a revolutionary impact from individual to the industrial fiber recognition process. The FabricNet can recognize a large scale of fibers by only utilizing a surface image of fabric. The recognition system is constructed using a distinct category of class-based ensemble convolutional neural network (CNN) architecture. The experiment is conducted on recognizing 50 different types of textile fibers. This experiment includes a significantly large number of unique textile fibers than previous research endeavors to the best of our knowledge. We experiment with popular CNN architectures that include Inception, ResNet, VGG, MobileNet, DenseNet, and Xception. Finally, the experimental results demonstrate that FabricNet outperforms the state-of-the-art popular CNN architectures by reaching an accuracy of 84% and F1-score of 90%.