Deep Learning Methods for Quantifying Invasive Benthic Species in the Great Lakes - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

Deep Learning Methods for Quantifying Invasive Benthic Species in the Great Lakes

Gideon Billings, K. Skinner, and M. Johnson-Roberson
Conference Paper, Proceedings of American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting Abstracts, December, 2017

Abstract

In recent decades, invasive species such as the round goby and dreissenid mussels have greatly impacted the Great Lakes ecosystem. It is critical to monitor these species, model their distribution, and quantify the impacts on the native fisheries and surrounding ecosystem in order to develop an effective management response. However, data collection in underwater environments is challenging and expensive. Furthermore, the round goby is typically found in rocky habitats, which are inaccessible to standard survey techniques such as bottom trawling. In this work we propose a robotic system for visual data collection to automatically detect and quantify invasive round gobies and mussels in the Great Lakes. Robotic platforms equipped with cameras can perform efficient, cost-effective, low-bias benthic surveys. This data collection can be further optimized through automatic detection and annotation of the target species. Deep learning methods have shown success in image recognition tasks. However, these methods often rely on a labelled training dataset, with up to millions of labelled images. Hand labeling large numbers of images is expensive and often impracticable. Furthermore, data collected in the field may be sparse when only considering images that contain the objects of interest. It is easier to collect dense, clean data in controlled lab settings, but this data is not a realistic representation of real field environments. In this work, we propose a deep learning approach to generate a large set of labelled training data realistic of underwater environments in the field. To generate these images, first we draw random sample images of individual fish and mussels from a library of images captured in a controlled lab environment. Next, these randomly drawn samples will be automatically merged into natural background images. Finally, we will use a generative adversarial network (GAN) that incorporates constraints of the physical model of underwater light propagation to simulate the process of underwater image formation in various water conditions. The output of the GAN will be realistic looking annotated underwater images. This generated dataset of images will be used to train a classifier to identify round gobies and mussels in order to measure the biomass and abundance of these invasive species in the Great Lakes.

BibTeX

@conference{Billings-2017-130150,
author = {Gideon Billings and K. Skinner and M. Johnson-Roberson},
title = {Deep Learning Methods for Quantifying Invasive Benthic Species in the Great Lakes},
booktitle = {Proceedings of American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting Abstracts},
year = {2017},
month = {December},
}