Research Article | Open Access
Volume 2023 |Article ID 0038 | https://doi.org/10.34133/plantphenomics.0038

From Laboratory to Field: Unsupervised Domain Adaptation for Plant Disease Recognition in the Wild

Xinlu Wu,1 Xijian Fan ,1 Peng Luo,2,3 Sruti Das Choudhury,4 Tardi Tjahjadi,5 and Chunhua Hu1

1College of Information Science and Technology, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing 210037, China.
2Institute of Forest Resource Information Techniques, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Beijing 100091, China
3Key Laboratory of Forestry Remote Sensing and Information System, National Forestry and Grassland Administration, Beijing 100091, China
4Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68588, USA
5School of Engineering, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK

Received 
28 Aug 2022
Accepted 
28 Feb 2023
Published
28 Mar 2023

Abstract

Plant disease recognition is of vital importance to monitor plant development and predicting crop production. However, due to data degradation caused by different conditions of image acquisition, e.g., laboratory vs. field environment, machine learning-based recognition models generated within a specific dataset (source domain) tend to lose their validity when generalized to a novel dataset (target domain). To this end, domain adaptation methods can be leveraged for the recognition by learning invariant representations across domains. In this paper, we aim at addressing the issues of domain shift existing in plant disease recognition and propose a novel unsupervised domain adaptation method via uncertainty regularization, namely, Multi-Representation Subdomain Adaptation Network with Uncertainty Regularization for Cross-Species Plant Disease Classification (MSUN). Our simple but effective MSUN makes a breakthrough in plant disease recognition in the wild by using a large amount of unlabeled data and via nonadversarial training. Specifically, MSUN comprises multirepresentation, subdomain adaptation modules and auxiliary uncertainty regularization. The multirepresentation module enables MSUN to learn the overall structure of features and also focus on capturing more details by using the multiple representations of the source domain. This effectively alleviates the problem of large interdomain discrepancy. Subdomain adaptation is used to capture discriminative properties by addressing the issue of higher interclass similarity and lower intraclass variation. Finally, the auxiliary uncertainty regularization effectively suppresses the uncertainty problem due to domain transfer. MSUN was experimentally validated to achieve optimal results on the PlantDoc, Plant-Pathology, Corn-Leaf-Diseases, and Tomato-Leaf-Diseases datasets, with accuracies of 56.06%, 72.31%, 96.78%, and 50.58%, respectively, surpassing other state-of-the-art domain adaptation techniques considerably.

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