Title :
Digital image analysis based automated kiwifruit counting technique
Author :
Wijethunga, P. ; Samarasinghe, S. ; Kulasiri, D. ; Woodhead, I.
Author_Institution :
Centre for Adv. Comput. Solutions, Lincoln Univ., Canterbury
Abstract :
This Paper investigates the use of digital image analysis techniques for developing an automated kiwifruit counting system. Three simple counting methods followed by a minimum distance classifier based segmentation technique in L*a*b colour space were studied. Images were taken prior to harvesting at a New Zealand kiwifruit orchard. Accurate counting of kiwifruit in several sample regions of the orchard is required in order to estimate the fruit harvest. At present, the counting is manually done by hired employees. Manual counting has several issues, such as low accuracy, long duration and higher costs. Automated counting technique facilitates a fast, low cost and potentially more accurate way of counting kiwifruit. Several approaches were trialled and validated on different sets of images. Above 90% accuracy on gold image data and above 60% accuracy on green image data were obtained, showing the potential of using the approach for counting kiwifruit for the harvest estimation purpose. The results, limitations and ongoing research in developing a more robust and consistent technique will be discussed.
Keywords :
agriculture; estimation theory; image classification; image colour analysis; image sampling; image segmentation; automated kiwifruit counting system; colour space; digital image analysis; fruit harvest estimation; minimum distance classifier; sample region; segmentation technique; Costs; Digital images; Gold; Hyperspectral imaging; Image analysis; Image processing; Image segmentation; Machine vision; Marine vehicles; Noise robustness; Applied image processing; distance transform; image segmentation; minimum distance classifier;
Conference_Titel :
Image and Vision Computing New Zealand, 2008. IVCNZ 2008. 23rd International Conference
Conference_Location :
Christchurch
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3780-1
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2583-9
DOI :
10.1109/IVCNZ.2008.4762149