Litcius/Paper detail

Transfer Learning for Wildfire Identification in UAV Imagery

Haiyu Wu, Huayu Li, Alireza Shamsoshoara, Abolfazl Razi, Fatemeh Afghah

202040 citationsDOI

Abstract

Due to Wildfire’s huge destructive impacts on agriculture and food production, wildlife habitat, climate, human life and ecosystem, timely discovery of fires enable swift response to fires before they go out of control, in order to minimize the resulting damage and impacts. One of the emerging technologies for fire monitoring is deploying Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, due to their high flexibility and maneuverability, less human risk, and on-demand high quality imaging capabilities. In order to realize a real-time system for fire detection and expansion analysis, fast and high-accuracy image-processing algorithms are required. Several studies have shown that deep learning methods can provide the most accurate response, however the training time can be prohibitively long, especially when using online learning for constant refinement of the developed model. Another challenge is the lack of large datasets for training a deep learning algorithm. In this respect, we propose to use a pretrained mobileNetV2 architecture to implement transfer learning, which requires a smaller dataset and reduces the computational complexity while not compromising the accuracy. In addition, we conduct an effective data augmentation pipeline to simulate some extreme scenarios, which could promise the robustness of our approach. The testing results illustrate that our method maintains a high identification accuracy in different situations - original dataset (99.7%), adding Gaussian blurred (95.3%), and additive Gaussian noise (99.3%) <sup xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">1 2</sup>

Topics & Concepts

Identification (biology)Computer scienceTransfer of learningRemote sensingArtificial intelligenceComputer visionGeologyBotanyBiologyFire Detection and Safety SystemsVideo Surveillance and Tracking MethodsFire effects on ecosystems