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.
CITATION STYLE
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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