Tomato plant leaf disease segmentation and multiclass disease detection using hybrid optimization enabled deep learning.

J Biotechnol

Department of Artificial Intelligence and Data Science, Srinivas Institute of Technology, Mangaluru, Karnataka 574143, India.

Published: September 2023


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Article Abstract

Production of crops is increasing day by day in agriculture sectors. The insecurity of food is a main reason of plant disease and is a main global issue that humans face these days. With the design of contemporary environmental agriculture, more focus is devised for yielding the crop and elevating its quality. The occurrence of crops has elevated in years and the kind of disease has become more and more complex. The disease in plants and the pernicious insects are the major risks in agriculture field. Thus, earlier discovery and treatment of this disease are imperative. The major design of Deep Learning (DL) model helped in detecting the plant disease and grants a dynamic tool with accurate results. This paper presents DL-assisted technique for detecting and classifying the tomato disease and used deep batch-normalized eLu Alex Net (DbneAlexnet) for classifying the tomato plant leaves. Initially, tomato plant leaf images are taken as an input from specific dataset represented and it is subjected to preprocessing phase to eliminate unwanted distortions using anisotropic filtering. Then, the segmentation is carried out using U-net, which is trained by Gradient-Golden search optimization (Gradient-GSO) Algorithm and it is incorporation of both Golden search optimization (GSO) and Gradient concept. Thereafter the segmented image is given to image augmentation process, where position augmentation and color augmentation are considered. Finally, the multiclass plant leaf disease is classified using DbneAlexnet and is trained using proposed Gradient Jaya- Golden search optimization (GJ-GSO). Here, the GJ-GSO is devised with the integration of Gradient concept, Jaya algorithm, and GSO algorithm. The proposed GJ-GSO-based DbneAlexnet outperformed highest accuracy of 92.4%, True positive rate (TPR) of 91.9%, True negative rate (TNR) of 92.2% and smallest False Positive Rate (FPR) of 0.078. Hence, the technique with unified segmentation and classification is effectual for identifying the plant disease and the empirical research verifies the benefits of the developed model.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiotec.2023.07.011DOI Listing

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