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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2025
  2. Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2025
  3. Abstract

    Mungbean (Vigna radiata(L.) Wizcek) is an important pulse crop, increasingly used as a source of protein, fiber, low fat, carbohydrates, minerals, and bioactive compounds in human diets. Mungbean is a dicot plant with trifoliate leaves. The primary component of many plant functions, including photosynthesis, light interception, and canopy structure, are leaves. The objectives were to investigate leaf morphological attributes, use image analysis to extract leaf morphological traits from photos from the Iowa Mungbean Diversity (IMD) panel, create a regression model to predict leaflet area, and undertake association mapping. We collected over 5000 leaf images of the IMD panel consisting of 484 accessions over 2 years (2020 and 2021) with two replications per experiment. Leaf traits were extracted using image analysis, analyzed, and used for association mapping. Morphological diversity included leaflet type (oval or lobed), leaflet size (small, medium, large), lobed angle (shallow, deep), and vein coloration (green, purple). A regression model was developed to predict each ovate leaflet's area (adjustedR2 = 0.97; residual standard errors of < = 1.10). The candidate genesVradi01g07560,Vradi05g01240,Vradi02g05730, andVradi03g00440are associated with multiple traits (length, width, perimeter, and area) across the leaflets (left, terminal, and right). These are suitable candidate genes for further investigation in their role in leaf development, growth, and function. Future studies will be needed to correlate the observed traits discussed here with yield or important agronomic traits for use as phenotypic or genotypic markers in marker‐aided selection methods for mungbean crop improvement.

     
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2024
  4. Free, publicly-accessible full text available August 8, 2024
  5. Free, publicly-accessible full text available October 1, 2024
  6. Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 1, 2024
  7. Introduction

    Computer vision and deep learning (DL) techniques have succeeded in a wide range of diverse fields. Recently, these techniques have been successfully deployed in plant science applications to address food security, productivity, and environmental sustainability problems for a growing global population. However, training these DL models often necessitates the large-scale manual annotation of data which frequently becomes a tedious and time-and-resource- intensive process. Recent advances in self-supervised learning (SSL) methods have proven instrumental in overcoming these obstacles, using purely unlabeled datasets to pre-train DL models.

    Methods

    Here, we implement the popular self-supervised contrastive learning methods of NNCLR Nearest neighbor Contrastive Learning of visual Representations) and SimCLR (Simple framework for Contrastive Learning of visual Representations) for the classification of spatial orientation and segmentation of embryos of maize kernels. Maize kernels are imaged using a commercial high-throughput imaging system. This image data is often used in multiple downstream applications across both production and breeding applications, for instance, sorting for oil content based on segmenting and quantifying the scutellum’s size and for classifying haploid and diploid kernels.

    Results and discussion

    We show that in both classification and segmentation problems, SSL techniques outperform their purely supervised transfer learning-based counterparts and are significantly more annotation efficient. Additionally, we show that a single SSL pre-trained model can be efficiently finetuned for both classification and segmentation, indicating good transferability across multiple downstream applications. Segmentation models with SSL-pretrained backbones produce DICE similarity coefficients of 0.81, higher than the 0.78 and 0.73 of those with ImageNet-pretrained and randomly initialized backbones, respectively. We observe that finetuning classification and segmentation models on as little as 1% annotation produces competitive results. These results show SSL provides a meaningful step forward in data efficiency with agricultural deep learning and computer vision.

     
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  8. Advances in imaging hardware allow high throughput capture of the detailed three-dimensional (3D) structure of plant canopies. The point cloud data is typically post-processed to extract coarse-scale geometric features (like volume, surface area, height, etc.) for downstream analysis. We extend feature extraction from 3D point cloud data to various additional features, which we denote as ‘canopy fingerprints’. This is motivated by the successful application of the fingerprint concept for molecular fingerprints in chemistry applications and acoustic fingerprints in sound engineering applications. We developed an end-to-end pipeline to generate canopy fingerprints of a three-dimensional point cloud of soybean [Glycine max(L.) Merr.] canopies grown in hill plots captured by a terrestrial laser scanner (TLS). The pipeline includes noise removal, registration, and plot extraction, followed by the canopy fingerprint generation. The canopy fingerprints are generated by splitting the data into multiple sub-canopy scale components and extracting sub-canopy scale geometric features. The generated canopy fingerprints are interpretable and can assist in identifying patterns in a database of canopies, querying similar canopies, or identifying canopies with a certain shape. The framework can be extended to other modalities (for instance, hyperspectral point clouds) and tuned to find the most informative fingerprint representation for downstream tasks. These canopy fingerprints can aid in the utilization of canopy traits at previously unutilized scales, and therefore have applications in plant breeding and resilient crop production.

     
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