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首页|Applying Machine Learning to Investigate Long Term Insect-Plant Interactions Preserved on Digitized Herbarium Specimens

Applying Machine Learning to Investigate Long Term Insect-Plant Interactions Preserved on Digitized Herbarium Specimens

Applying Machine Learning to Investigate Long Term Insect-Plant Interactions Preserved on Digitized Herbarium Specimens

来源:bioRxiv_logobioRxiv
英文摘要

Abstract Premise of the studyDespite the economic importance of insect damage to plants, long-term data documenting changes in insect damage (‘herbivory’) and diversity are limited. Millions of pressed plant specimens are now available online for collecting big data on plant-insect interactions during the Anthropocene. MethodsWe initiated development of machine learning methods to automate extraction of herbivory data from herbarium specimens. We trained an insect damage detector and a damage type classifier on two distantly related plant species. We experimented with 1) classifying six types of herbivory and two control categories of undamaged leaf, and 2) detecting two of these damage categories for which several hundred annotations were available. ResultsClassification models identified the correct type of herbivory 81.5% of the time. The damage classifier was accurate for categories with at least one hundred test samples. We show anecdotally that the detector works well when asked to detect two types of damage. DiscussionThe classifier and detector together are a promising first step for the automation of herbivory data collection. We describe ongoing efforts to increase the accuracy of these models to allow other researchers to extract similar data and apply them to address a variety of biological hypotheses.

Tomasi C.、Meineke E.K.、Pryer K.M.、Yuan S.

Department of Computer Science, Duke UniversityDepartment of Biology, Duke UniversityDepartment of Biology, Duke UniversityDepartment of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, Duke University

10.1101/790899

生物科学现状、生物科学发展环境生物学生物科学研究方法、生物科学研究技术

Anthropoceneclimate changeherbariuminsectsmachine learningspecies interactions

Tomasi C.,Meineke E.K.,Pryer K.M.,Yuan S..Applying Machine Learning to Investigate Long Term Insect-Plant Interactions Preserved on Digitized Herbarium Specimens[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-04-29].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/790899.点此复制

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