yolov4-tiny
Optimizing Delivery Logistics: Enhancing Speed and Safety with Drone Technology
Shastri, Maharshi, Shrivastav, Ujjval
The increasing demand for fast and cost effective last mile delivery solutions has catalyzed significant advancements in drone based logistics. This research describes the development of an AI integrated drone delivery system, focusing on route optimization, object detection, secure package handling, and real time tracking. The proposed system leverages YOLOv4 Tiny for object detection, the NEO 6M GPS module for navigation, and the A7670 SIM module for real time communication. A comparative analysis of lightweight AI models and hardware components is conducted to determine the optimal configuration for real time UAV based delivery. Key challenges including battery efficiency, regulatory compliance, and security considerations are addressed through the integration of machine learning techniques, IoT devices, and encryption protocols. Preliminary studies demonstrate improvement in delivery time compared to conventional ground based logistics, along with high accuracy recipient authentication through facial recognition. The study also discusses ethical implications and societal acceptance of drone deliveries, ensuring compliance with FAA, EASA and DGCA regulatory standards. Note: This paper presents the architecture, design, and preliminary simulation results of the proposed system. Experimental results, simulation benchmarks, and deployment statistics are currently being acquired. A comprehensive analysis will be included in the extended version of this work.
Lightweight Object Detection Using Quantized YOLOv4-Tiny for Emergency Response in Aerial Imagery
Boddu, Sindhu, Mukherjee, Arindam
This paper presents a lightweight and energy-efficient object detection solution for aerial imagery captured during emergency response situations. We focus on deploying the YOLOv4-Tiny model, a compact convolutional neural network, optimized through post-training quantization to INT8 precision. The model is trained on a custom-curated aerial emergency dataset, consisting of 10,820 annotated images covering critical emergency scenarios. Unlike prior works that rely on publicly available datasets, we created this dataset ourselves due to the lack of publicly available drone-view emergency imagery, making the dataset itself a key contribution of this work. The quantized model is evaluated against YOLOv5-small across multiple metrics, including mean Average Precision (mAP), F1 score, inference time, and model size. Experimental results demonstrate that the quantized YOLOv4-Tiny achieves comparable detection performance while reducing the model size from 22.5 MB to 6.4 MB and improving inference speed by 44\%. With a 71\% reduction in model size and a 44\% increase in inference speed, the quantized YOLOv4-Tiny model proves highly suitable for real-time emergency detection on low-power edge devices.
Efficient Object Detection of Marine Debris using Pruned YOLO Model
Aryaza, Abi, Yudistira, Novanto, Tibyani, null
Marine debris poses significant harm to marine life due to substances like microplastics, polychlorinated biphenyls, and pesticides, which damage habitats and poison organisms. Human-based solutions, such as diving, are increasingly ineffective in addressing this issue. Autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) are being developed for efficient sea garbage collection, with the choice of object detection architecture being critical. This research employs the YOLOv4 model for real-time detection of marine debris using the Trash-ICRA 19 dataset, consisting of 7683 images at 480x320 pixels. Various modifications-pretrained models, training from scratch, mosaic augmentation, layer freezing, YOLOv4-tiny, and channel pruning-are compared to enhance architecture efficiency. Channel pruning significantly improves detection speed, increasing the base YOLOv4 frame rate from 15.19 FPS to 19.4 FPS, with only a 1.2% drop in mean Average Precision, from 97.6% to 96.4%.
HIT-UAV: A high-altitude infrared thermal dataset for Unmanned Aerial Vehicle-based object detection
Suo, Jiashun, Wang, Tianyi, Zhang, Xingzhou, Chen, Haiyang, Zhou, Wei, Shi, Weisong
We present the HIT-UAV dataset, a high-altitude infrared thermal dataset for object detection applications on Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs). The dataset comprises 2,898 infrared thermal images extracted from 43,470 frames in hundreds of videos captured by UAVs in various scenarios including schools, parking lots, roads, and playgrounds. Moreover, the HIT-UAV provides essential flight data for each image, such as flight altitude, camera perspective, date, and daylight intensity. For each image, we have manually annotated object instances with bounding boxes of two types (oriented and standard) to tackle the challenge of significant overlap of object instances in aerial images. To the best of our knowledge, the HIT-UAV is the first publicly available high-altitude UAV-based infrared thermal dataset for detecting persons and vehicles. We have trained and evaluated well-established object detection algorithms on the HIT-UAV. Our results demonstrate that the detection algorithms perform exceptionally well on the HIT-UAV compared to visual light datasets since infrared thermal images do not contain significant irrelevant information about objects. We believe that the HIT-UAV will contribute to various UAV-based applications and researches.
Automated visual inspection of silicon detectors in CMS experiment
Giri, Nupur, Dugad, Shashi, Chhabria, Amit, Manwani, Rashmi, Asrani, Priyanka
In the CMS experiment at CERN, Geneva, a large number of HGCAL sensor modules are fabricated in advanced laboratories around the world. Each sensor module contains about 700 checkpoints for visual inspection thus making it almost impossible to carry out such inspection manually. As artificial intelligence is more and more widely used in manufacturing, traditional detection technologies are gradually being intelligent. In order to more accurately evaluate the checkpoints, we propose to use deep learning-based object detection techniques to detect manufacturing defects in testing large numbers of modules automatically.
Real-time object detection method based on improved YOLOv4-tiny
Jiang, Zicong, Zhao, Liquan, Li, Shuaiyang, Jia, Yanfei
The "You only look once v4"(YOLOv4) is one type of object detection methods in deep learning. YOLOv4-tiny is proposed based on YOLOv4 to simple the network structure and reduce parameters, which makes it be suitable for developing on the mobile and embedded devices. To improve the real-time of object detection, a fast object detection method is proposed based on YOLOv4-tiny. It firstly uses two ResBlock-D modules in ResNet-D network instead of two CSPBlock modules in Yolov4-tiny, which reduces the computation complexity. Secondly, it designs an auxiliary residual network block to extract more feature information of object to reduce detection error. In the design of auxiliary network, two consecutive 3x3 convolutions are used to obtain 5x5 receptive fields to extract global features, and channel attention and spatial attention are also used to extract more effective information. In the end, it merges the auxiliary network and backbone network to construct the whole network structure of improved YOLOv4-tiny. Simulation results show that the proposed method has faster object detection than YOLOv4-tiny and YOLOv3-tiny, and almost the same mean value of average precision as the YOLOv4-tiny. It is more suitable for real-time object detection.