OliVaR: Improving Olive Variety Recognition using Deep Neural Networks
The easy and accurate identification of varieties is fundamental in agriculture, especially in the olive sector, where more than 1200 olive varieties are currently known worldwide. Varietal misidentification leads to many potential problems for all the actors in the sector: farmers and nursery worke...
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Zusammenfassung: | The easy and accurate identification of varieties is fundamental in
agriculture, especially in the olive sector, where more than 1200 olive
varieties are currently known worldwide. Varietal misidentification leads to
many potential problems for all the actors in the sector: farmers and nursery
workers may establish the wrong variety, leading to its maladaptation in the
field; olive oil and table olive producers may label and sell a non-authentic
product; consumers may be misled; and breeders may commit errors during
targeted crossings between different varieties. To date, the standard for
varietal identification and certification consists of two methods:
morphological classification and genetic analysis. The morphological
classification consists of the visual pairwise comparison of different organs
of the olive tree, where the most important organ is considered to be the
endocarp. In contrast, different methods for genetic classification exist
(RAPDs, SSR, and SNP). Both classification methods present advantages and
disadvantages. Visual morphological classification requires highly specialized
personnel and is prone to human error. Genetic identification methods are more
accurate but incur a high cost and are difficult to implement. This paper
introduces OliVaR, a novel approach to olive varietal identification. OliVaR
uses a teacher-student deep learning architecture to learn the defining
characteristics of the endocarp of each specific olive variety and perform
classification. We construct what is, to the best of our knowledge, the largest
olive variety dataset to date, comprising image data for 131 varieties from the
Mediterranean basin. We thoroughly test OliVaR on this dataset and show that it
correctly predicts olive varieties with over 86% accuracy. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2303.00431 |