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An AI-powered app that can detect poison ivy

AI-powered app that can detect poison ivy
Data augmentation methods applied to the dataset. Credit: Multimedia Tools and Applications (2024). DOI: 10.1007/s11042-023-17920-3

Poison ivy ranks among the most medically problematic plants. Up to 50 million people worldwide suffer annually from rashes caused by contact with the plant, a climbing, woody vine native to the United States, Canada, Mexico, Bermuda, the Western Bahamas and several areas in Asia.

It's found on farms, in woods, landscapes, fields, hiking trails and other open spaces. So, if you go to those places, you're susceptible to irritation caused by , which can lead to reactions that require medical attention. Worse, most people don't know poison ivy when they see it.

To find poison ivy before it finds you, University of Florida scientists published a new study, in Multimedia Tools and Applications, in which they use to confirm that an app can identify poison ivy.

Nathan Boyd, a professor of horticultural sciences at the UF/IFAS Gulf Coast Research and Education Center near Tampa, led the research. Renato Herrig, a post-doctoral researcher in Boyd's lab, designed the app.

"We were the first to do this, and it was designed as a tool for hikers or others working outdoors," Boyd said. "The app uses a camera to identify in if poison ivy is present and provides you with a measure of certainty for the detection. It also functions even if you don't have connectivity to the internet."

The next step is to make the app commercially available, and there's no timetable for that yet, Boyd said.

AI-powered app that can detect poison ivy
The geographical representation of places where poison ivy images were collected from in the United States of America. Credit: Multimedia Tools and Applications (2024). DOI: 10.1007/s11042-023-17920-3

For the study, researchers collected thousands of images of poison ivy from five locations: Alderman's Ford Conservation Park and Hillsborough River State Park, both in Florida; Eufala National Wildlife Refuge in Alabama; York River State Park in Virgina and Fall Creek Falls State Park in Tennessee.

They labeled images, and in each image, scientists put boxes around the leaves and stems of the plant. The boxed images were critical because poison ivy has a unique leaf arrangement and shape. Scientists use those characteristics to identify the plant.

They then ran the images through AI programs and taught a computer to recognize which plants are poison ivy. They also included images of plants that are not poison ivy or plants that look like poison ivy to be certain the computer learns to distinguish them.

"We believe that by integrating an object-detection algorithm, and plant science, our research can encourage and support further investigations to understand poison ivy distribution and minimize ," Boyd said. In their future work UF/IFAS researchers hope to expand the use of the app to identify more noxious plants.

More information: Renato Herrig Furlanetto et al, A mobile application to identify poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) plants in real time using convolutional neural network, Multimedia Tools and Applications (2024). DOI: 10.1007/s11042-023-17920-3

Citation: An AI-powered app that can detect poison ivy (2024, January 29) retrieved 27 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2024-01-ai-powered-app-poison-ivy.html
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