Analysis of the possibilities of tire‐defect inspection based on unsupervised learning and deep learning

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Abstract

At present, inspection systems process visual data captured by cameras, with deep learning approaches applied to detect defects. Defect detection results usually have an accuracy higher than 94%. Real‐life applications, however, are not very common. In this paper, we describe the development of a tire inspection system for the tire industry. We provide methods for processing tire sidewall data obtained from a camera and a laser sensor. The captured data comprise visual and geometric data characterizing the tire surface, providing a real representation of the captured tire sidewall. We use an unfolding process, that is, a polar transform, to further process the cameraobtained data. The principles and automation of the designed polar transform, based on polynomial regression (i.e., supervised learning), are presented. Based on the data from the laser sensor, the detection of abnormalities is performed using an unsupervised clustering method, followed by the classification of defects using the VGG‐16 neural network. The inspection system aims to detect trained and untrained abnormalities, namely defects, as opposed to using only supervised learning methods.

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Kuric, I., Klarák, J., Sága, M., Císar, M., Hajdučík, A., & Wiecek, D. (2021). Analysis of the possibilities of tire‐defect inspection based on unsupervised learning and deep learning. Sensors, 21(21). https://doi.org/10.3390/s21217073

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