Recognition of weeds with image processing and their use with fuzzy logic for precision farming

Yang, C.-C., Prasher, S.O., Landry, J.-A., Perret, J. and Ramaswamy, H.S. 2000. Recognition of weeds with image processing and their use with fuzzy logic for precision farming. Can. Agric. Eng. 42:195200. Herbicide use can be reduced if the spatial distribution of weeds in the field is taken into account. This paper reports the initial stages of development of an image capture/processing system to detect weeds, as well as a fuzzy logic decision-making system to determine where and how much herbicide to apply in an agricultural field. The system used a commercially available digital camera and a personal computer. In the image processing stage, green objects in each image were identified using a greenness method that compared the red, green, and blue (RGB) intensities. The RGB matrix was reduced to a binary form by applying the following criterion: if the green intensity of a pixel was greater than the red and the blue intensities, then the pixel was assigned a value of one; otherwise the pixel was given a value of zero. The resulting binary matrix was used to compute greenness area for weed coverage, and greenness distribution of weeds (weed patch). The values of weed coverage and weed patch were inputs to the fuzzy logic decision-making system, which used the membership functions to control the herbicide application rate at each location. Simulations showed that a graduated fuzzy strategy could potentially reduce herbicide application by 5 to 24%, and that an on/off strategy resulted in an even greater reduction of 15 to 64%.

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