Plant Recognition by Integrating Color and Range Data Obtained Through Stereo Vision

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Abstract

We present a new method for recognizing plants automatically and nondestructively by measuring plants three-dimensionally, including height, width, and leaf area, which are important clues for determining a plant condition. We use only two cameras and small plant preparation. A pair of color images for a plant is obtained by a binocular stereo camera, then leaf and stalk areas are extracted from color images, range data is calculated from stereo images, three-dimensional reconstruction for the plant is generated by using the Delaunay triangulation and the plant is measured in the generated reconstruction. Two experimental results are shown for actual plants.

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Takizawa, H., Ezaki, N., Mizuno, S., & Yamamoto, S. (2005). Plant Recognition by Integrating Color and Range Data Obtained Through Stereo Vision. Journal of Advanced Computational Intelligence and Intelligent Informatics, 9(6), 630–636. https://doi.org/10.20965/jaciii.2005.p0630

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