A COMPARATIVE PERFORMANCE EVALUATION
OF VARIOUS CLASSIFICATION MODELS
FOR DETECTION AND CLASSIFICATION
OF FLYING INSECTS

Nithin Kumar1ORCID logo, Nagarathna2ORCID logo, Vijay Kumar L3ORCID logo and Francesco Flammini4ORCID logo

1Vidyavardhaka College of Engineering
  Mysuru, India
2PES College of Engineering
  Mandya, India
3University of Agricultural Sciences
  Bangalore, India
4University of Applied Sciences and Arts of Southern Switzerland
  Manno, Switzerland

INDECS 21(1), 52-68, 2023
DOI 10.7906/indecs.21.1.5
Full text available in pdf pdf icon format.
 

Received: 14th July 2022.
Accepted: 28th January 2023.
Regular article

ABSTRACT

Agriculture has long been a part of Indian culture. It is known as the Indian economy's backbone. Agriculture contributes to 17 % of the Indian GDP, but still, farmers confront several problems in growing their crops, one among them is insect pests. 'Computational Entomology' is a branch of data mining that assists farmers in overcoming the challenges of damaging insect pests by utilizing appropriate sensors and methodologies for pest classification and application of the pesticides at the right time. The authors used various machine learning and deep learning algorithms to classify insects and examine the influence of classification performance on multiple classes of insects often found in Indian agricultural fields with varying numbers of data and classification models. The study found that proposed CNN based classification model performs better than other classification models in insect categorization, with a classification accuracy of 94,6 %. The research work done till now in the field of computational entomology deals with the insects grown in laboratory colonies or well-developed insects grown in the same geographic region and condition, but we have evaluated the performance of different classification models using random images available over the internet to select the well-suited classification model to classify flying insects. Applications with precise insect classification using machine learning and deep learning algorithms would have significant implications for entomological research. It is necessary to develop an automated insect classification techniques to provide a foundation for future research in the field of computational entomology.

KEY WORDS
computational entomology, insect pest, machine learning techniques, classification, deep learning techniques

CLASSIFICATION
JEL:C88


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