Publication | Closed Access
First results in vision-based crop line tracking
78
Citations
6
References
2002
Year
Unknown Venue
Precision AgricultureEngineeringAgricultural RobotField RoboticsAgricultural EconomicsNear TermImage AnalysisPattern RecognitionRgb ImageSustainable AgricultureObject TrackingAgricultural MachineryEdge DetectionMachine VisionCrop Cut BoundaryMoving Object TrackingFirst ResultsComputer VisionAgricultural EngineeringRemote Sensing
Automation of agricultural harvesting equipment in the near term appears both economically viable and technically feasible. This paper describes a vision-based algorithm which guides a harvester by tracking the line between cut and uncut crop. Using this algorithm, a harvester has successfully cut roughly one acre of crop to date, at speeds of up to 4.5 miles an hour in an actual alfalfa field. A broad range of methods for detecting the crop cut boundary were considered, including both range-based and vision-based techniques; several of these methods were implemented and evaluated on data from an alfalfa field. The final crop-line detection algorithm is presented, which operates by computing the best-fit step function of a normalized-color measure of each row of an RGB image. Results of the algorithm on some sample crop images are shown, and potential improvements are discussed.
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