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 soil parameter


Soil Characterization of Watermelon Field through Internet of Things: A New Approach to Soil Salinity Measurement

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

In the modern agricultural industry, technology plays a crucial role in the advancement of cultivation. To increase crop productivity, soil require some specific characteristics. For watermelon cultivation, soil needs to be sandy and of high temperature with proper irrigation. This research aims to design and implement an intelligent IoT-based soil characterization system for the watermelon field to measure the soil characteristics. IoT based developed system measures moisture, temperature, and pH of soil using different sensors, and the sensor data is uploaded to the cloud via Arduino and Raspberry Pi, from where users can obtain the data using mobile application and webpage developed for this system. To ensure the precision of the framework, this study includes the comparison between the readings of the soil parameters by the existing field soil meters, the values obtained from the sensors integrated IoT system, and data obtained from soil science laboratory. Excessive salinity in soil affects the watermelon yield. This paper proposes a model for the measurement of soil salinity based on soil resistivity. It establishes a relationship between soil salinity and soil resistivity from the data obtained in the laboratory using artificial neural network (ANN).


Soil analysis with machine-learning-based processing of stepped-frequency GPR field measurements: Preliminary study

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) has been widely studied as a tool for extracting soil parameters relevant to agriculture and horticulture. When combined with Machine-Learning-based (ML) methods, high-resolution Stepped Frequency Countinuous Wave Radar (SFCW) measurements hold the promise to give cost effective access to depth resolved soil parameters, including at root-level depth. In a first step in this direction, we perform an extensive field survey with a tractor mounted SFCW GPR instrument. Using ML data processing we test the GPR instrument's capabilities to predict the apparent electrical conductivity (ECaR) as measured by a simultaneously recording Electromagnetic Induction (EMI) instrument. The large-scale field measurement campaign with 3472 co-registered and geo-located GPR and EMI data samples distributed over ~6600 square meters was performed on a golf course. The selected terrain benefits from a high surface homogeneity, but also features the challenge of only small, and hence hard to discern, variations in the measured soil parameter. Based on the quantitative results we suggest the use of nugget-to-sill ratio as a performance metric for the evaluation of end-to-end ML performance in the agricultural setting and discuss the limiting factors in the multi-sensor regression setting. The code is released as open source and available at https://opensource.silicon-austria.com/xuc/soil-analysis-machine-learning-stepped-frequency-gpr.


Red Teaming Models for Hyperspectral Image Analysis Using Explainable AI

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Remote sensing (RS) applications in the space domain demand machine learning (ML) models that are reliable, robust, and quality-assured, making red teaming a vital approach for identifying and exposing potential flaws and biases. Since both fields advance independently, there is a notable gap in integrating red teaming strategies into RS. This paper introduces a methodology for examining ML models operating on hyperspectral images within the HYPERVIEW challenge, focusing on soil parameters' estimation. We use post-hoc explanation methods from the Explainable AI (XAI) domain to critically assess the best performing model that won the HYPERVIEW challenge and served as an inspiration for the model deployed on board the INTUITION-1 hyperspectral mission. Our approach effectively red teams the model by pinpointing and validating key shortcomings, constructing a model that achieves comparable performance using just 1% of the input features and a mere up to 5% performance loss. Additionally, we propose a novel way of visualizing explanations that integrate domain-specific information about hyperspectral bands (wavelengths) and data transformations to better suit interpreting models for hyperspectral image analysis.