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Publications

Publications by Filipe Neves Santos

2020

Multivariate Analysis to Assist Decision-Making in Many-objective Engineering Optimization Problems

Authors
Santos, F; Costa, L;

Publication
COMPUTATIONAL SCIENCE AND ITS APPLICATIONS - ICCSA 2020, PT III

Abstract
Data processing (or the transformation of data into knowledge and/or information) has become an indispensable tool for decision-making in many areas of engineering. Engineering optimization problems with many objectives are common. However, the decision-making process for these problems is complicated since there are many trade-offs that are difficult to identify. Thus, in this work, multivariate statistical methods, Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Cluster Analysis (CA), have been studied and applied to analyze the results of many objective engineering optimization problems. PCA reduces the number of objectives to a very small number, CA through the similarities and dissimilarities, creates groups of solutions, i.e., bringing together in the same group solutions with the same characteristics and behaviors. Two engineering optimization problems with many objectives are solved: a mechanical problem consisting in the optimal design of laminated plates, with four objectives and a problem of optimization of the radar waveform, with nine objectives. For the problem of the design of laminated plates through PCA allowed to reduce to two objectives and through CA it was possible to create three distinct groups of solutions. For the problem of optimization of the radar waveform, it was possible to reduce the objectives from nine to two objectives representing the greatest variability of the data, and CA defined three distinct groups of solutions. These results demonstrate that these tools are effective to assist the decision-making processes in the presence of a large number of solutions and/or objectives.

2020

Navigation Stack for Robots Working in Steep Slope Vineyard

Authors
Santos, LC; de Aguiar, ASP; Santos, FN; Valente, A; Ventura, JB; Sousa, AJ;

Publication
Intelligent Systems and Applications - Proceedings of the 2020 Intelligent Systems Conference, IntelliSys 2020, London, UK, September 3-4, 2020, Volume 1

Abstract
Agricultural robotics is nowadays a complex, challenging, and relevant research topic for the sustainability of our society. Some agricultural environments present harsh conditions to robotics operability. In the case of steep-slope vineyards, there are several robotic challenges: terrain irregularities, characteristics of illumination, and inaccuracy/unavailability of the Global Navigation Satellite System. Under these conditions, robotics navigation, mapping, and localization become a challenging task. Performing these tasks with safety and accuracy, a reliable and advanced Navigation stack for robots working in a steep slope vineyard is required. This paper presents the integration of several robotic components, path planning aware of robot centre of gravity and terrain slope, occupation grid map extraction from satellite images, a localization and mapping procedure based on high-level visual features reliable under GNSS signals blockage/missing, for steep-slope robots. © 2021, Springer Nature Switzerland AG.

2021

Particle filter refinement based on clustering procedures for high-dimensional localization and mapping systems

Authors
Aguiar, AS; dos Santos, FN; Sobreira, H; Cunha, JB; Sousa, AJ;

Publication
ROBOTICS AND AUTONOMOUS SYSTEMS

Abstract
Developing safe autonomous robotic applications for outdoor agricultural environments is a research field that still presents many challenges. Simultaneous Localization and Mapping can be crucial to endow the robot to localize itself with accuracy and, consequently, perform tasks such as crop monitoring and harvesting autonomously. In these environments, the robotic localization and mapping systems usually benefit from the high density of visual features. When using filter-based solutions to localize the robot, such an environment usually uses a high number of particles to perform accurately. These two facts can lead to computationally expensive localization algorithms that are intended to perform in real-time. This work proposes a refinement step to a standard high-dimensional filter based localization solution through the novelty of downsampling the filter using an online clustering algorithm and applying a scan-match procedure to each cluster. Thus, this approach allows scan matchers without high computational cost, even in high dimensional filters. Experiments using real data in an agricultural environment show that this approach improves the Particle Filter performance estimating the robot pose. Additionally, results show that this approach can build a precise 3D reconstruction of agricultural environments using visual scans, i.e., 3D scans with RGB information.

2021

Potential Non-Invasive Technique for Accessing Plant Water Contents Using a Radar System

Authors
Santos, LC; dos Santos, FN; Morais, R; Duarte, C;

Publication
AGRONOMY-BASEL

Abstract
Sap flow measurements of trees are today the most common method to determine evapotranspiration at the tree and the forest/crop canopy level. They provide independent measurements for flux comparisons and model validation. The most common approach to measure the sap flow is based on intrusive solutions with heaters and thermal sensors. This sap flow sensor technology is not very reliable for more than one season crop; it is intrusive and not adequate for low diameter trunk trees. The non-invasive methods comprise mostly Radio-frequency (RF) technologies, typically using satellite or air-born sources. This system can monitor large fields but cannot measure sap levels of a single plant (precision agriculture). This article studies the hypothesis to use of RF signals attenuation principle to detect variations in the quantity of water present in a single plant. This article presents a well-defined experience to measure water content in leaves, by means of high gains RF antennas, spectrometer, and a robotic arm. Moreover, a similar concept is studied with an off-the-shelf radar solution-for the automotive industry-to detect changes in the water presence in a single plant and leaf. The conclusions indicate a novel potential application of this technology to precision agriculture as the experiments data is directly related to the sap flow variations in plant.

2021

Bringing Semantics to the Vineyard: An Approach on Deep Learning-Based Vine Trunk Detection

Authors
Aguiar, AS; Monteiro, NN; dos Santos, FN; Pires, EJS; Silva, D; Sousa, AJ; Boaventura Cunha, J;

Publication
AGRICULTURE-BASEL

Abstract
The development of robotic solutions in unstructured environments brings several challenges, mainly in developing safe and reliable navigation solutions. Agricultural environments are particularly unstructured and, therefore, challenging to the implementation of robotics. An example of this is the mountain vineyards, built-in steep slope hills, which are characterized by satellite signal blockage, terrain irregularities, harsh ground inclinations, and others. All of these factors impose the implementation of precise and reliable navigation algorithms, so that robots can operate safely. This work proposes the detection of semantic natural landmarks that are to be used in Simultaneous Localization and Mapping algorithms. Thus, Deep Learning models were trained and deployed to detect vine trunks. As significant contributions, we made available a novel vine trunk dataset, called VineSet, which was constituted by more than 9000 images and respective annotations for each trunk. VineSet was used to train state-of-the-art Single Shot Multibox Detector models. Additionally, we deployed these models in an Edge-AI fashion and achieve high frame rate execution. Finally, an assisted annotation tool was proposed to make the process of dataset building easier and improve models incrementally. The experiments show that our trained models can detect trunks with an Average Precision up to 84.16% and our assisted annotation tool facilitates the annotation process, even in other areas of agriculture, such as orchards and forests. Additional experiments were performed, where the impact of the amount of training data and the comparison between using Transfer Learning and training from scratch were evaluated. In these cases, some theoretical assumptions were verified.

2021

Measuring Canopy Geometric Structure Using Optical Sensors Mounted on Terrestrial Vehicles: A Case Study in Vineyards

Authors
da Silva, DQ; Aguiar, AS; dos Santos, FN; Sousa, AJ; Rabino, D; Biddoccu, M; Bagagiolo, G; Delmastro, M;

Publication
AGRICULTURE-BASEL

Abstract
Smart and precision agriculture concepts require that the farmer measures all relevant variables in a continuous way and processes this information in order to build better prescription maps and to predict crop yield. These maps feed machinery with variable rate technology to apply the correct amount of products in the right time and place, to improve farm profitability. One of the most relevant information to estimate the farm yield is the Leaf Area Index. Traditionally, this index can be obtained from manual measurements or from aerial imagery: the former is time consuming and the latter requires the use of drones or aerial services. This work presents an optical sensing-based hardware module that can be attached to existing autonomous or guided terrestrial vehicles. During the normal operation, the module collects periodic geo-referenced monocular images and laser data. With that data a suggested processing pipeline, based on open-source software and composed by Structure from Motion, Multi-View Stereo and point cloud registration stages, can extract Leaf Area Index and other crop-related features. Additionally, in this work, a benchmark of software tools is made. The hardware module and pipeline were validated considering real data acquired in two vineyards-Portugal and Italy. A dataset with sensory data collected by the module was made publicly available. Results demonstrated that: the system provides reliable and precise data on the surrounding environment and the pipeline is capable of computing volume and occupancy area from the acquired data.

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