CVAug 6, 2024

Benchmarking In-the-wild Multimodal Disease Recognition and A Versatile Baseline

arXiv:2408.03120v134 citationsh-index: 7
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of accurate plant disease classification in uncontrolled environments for agricultural applications, though it is incremental as it builds on existing recognition methods with new data and a baseline.

The authors tackled the problem of plant disease recognition in real-world images by creating a multimodal dataset with text descriptions and proposing a baseline model that uses multiple prototypes to address small inter-class discrepancy and large intra-class variance, achieving capabilities in few-shot and training-free scenarios.

Existing plant disease classification models have achieved remarkable performance in recognizing in-laboratory diseased images. However, their performance often significantly degrades in classifying in-the-wild images. Furthermore, we observed that in-the-wild plant images may exhibit similar appearances across various diseases (i.e., small inter-class discrepancy) while the same diseases may look quite different (i.e., large intra-class variance). Motivated by this observation, we propose an in-the-wild multimodal plant disease recognition dataset that contains the largest number of disease classes but also text-based descriptions for each disease. Particularly, the newly provided text descriptions are introduced to provide rich information in textual modality and facilitate in-the-wild disease classification with small inter-class discrepancy and large intra-class variance issues. Therefore, our proposed dataset can be regarded as an ideal testbed for evaluating disease recognition methods in the real world. In addition, we further present a strong yet versatile baseline that models text descriptions and visual data through multiple prototypes for a given class. By fusing the contributions of multimodal prototypes in classification, our baseline can effectively address the small inter-class discrepancy and large intra-class variance issues. Remarkably, our baseline model can not only classify diseases but also recognize diseases in few-shot or training-free scenarios. Extensive benchmarking results demonstrate that our proposed in-the-wild multimodal dataset sets many new challenges to the plant disease recognition task and there is a large space to improve for future works.

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