Presentation + Paper
12 April 2021 Lessons learned towards the immediate delivery of massive aerial imagery to farmers and crop consultants
Amy A. Gooch, Steve Petruzza, Attila Gyulassy, Giorgio Scorzelli, Valerio Pascucci, Lance Rantham, Weston Adcock, Calvin Coopmans
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
In this paper, we document lessons learned from using ViSOAR Ag Explorer™ in the fields of Arkansas and Utah in the 2018-2020 growing seasons. Our insights come from creating software with fast reading and writing of 2D aerial image mosaics for platform-agnostic collaborative analytics and visualization. We currently enable stitching in the field on a laptop without the need for an internet connection. The full resolution result is then available for instant streaming visualization and analytics via Python scripting. While our software, ViSOAR Ag Explorer™ removes the time and labor software bottleneck in processing large aerial surveys, enabling a cost-effective process to deliver actionable information to farmers, we learned valuable lessons with regard to the acquisition, storage, viewing, analysis, and planning stages of aerial data surveys. Additionally, with the ultimate goal of stitching thousands of images in minutes on board a UAV at the time of data capture, we performed preliminary tests for on-board, real-time stitching and analysis on USU AggieAir sUAS using lightweight computational resources. This system is able to create a 2D map while flying and allow interactive exploration of the full resolution data as soon as the platform has landed or has access to a network. This capability further speeds up the assessment process on the field and opens opportunities for new real-time photogrammetry applications. Flying and imaging over 1500-2000 acres per week provides up-to-date maps that give crop consultants a much broader scope of the field in general as well as providing a better view into planting and field preparation than could be observed from field level. Ultimately, our software and hardware could provide a much better understanding of weed presence and intensity or lack thereof.
Conference Presentation
© (2021) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Amy A. Gooch, Steve Petruzza, Attila Gyulassy, Giorgio Scorzelli, Valerio Pascucci, Lance Rantham, Weston Adcock, and Calvin Coopmans "Lessons learned towards the immediate delivery of massive aerial imagery to farmers and crop consultants", Proc. SPIE 11747, Autonomous Air and Ground Sensing Systems for Agricultural Optimization and Phenotyping VI, 117470A (12 April 2021); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2587694
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KEYWORDS
Airborne remote sensing

Analytics

Visual analytics

Visualization

Image analysis

Internet

Photogrammetry

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