Affiliation:
1. The Center for Data Science Education and Research Shiga University Hikone Japan
2. Department of Biological Sciences University of Cyprus Nicosia Cyprus
3. Instituto de Productos Naturales y Agrobiología (IPNA‐CSIC) Tenerife Spain
4. Department of Life Sciences Natural History Museum London UK
5. Department of Life Sciences Silwood Park Campus, Imperial College London Ascot UK
Abstract
AbstractComplex bulk samples of insects from biodiversity surveys present a challenge for taxonomic identification, which could be overcome by high‐throughput imaging combined with machine learning for rapid classification of specimens. These procedures require that taxonomic labels from an existing source data set are used for model training and prediction of an unknown target sample. However, such transfer learning may be problematic for the study of new samples not previously encountered in an image set, for example, from unexplored ecosystems, and require methods of domain adaptation that reduce the differences in the feature distribution of the source and target domains (training and test sets). We assessed the efficiency of domain adaptation for family‐level classification of bulk samples of Coleoptera, as a critical first step in the characterization of biodiversity samples. Neural network models trained with images from a global database of Coleoptera were applied to a biodiversity sample from understudied forests in Cyprus as the target. Within‐dataset classification accuracy reached 98% and depended on the number and quality of training images, and on dataset complexity. The accuracy of between‐datasets predictions (across disparate source–target pairs that do not share any species or genera) was at most 82% and depended greatly on the standardization of the imaging procedure. An algorithm for domain adaptation, domain adversarial training of neural networks (DANN), significantly improved the prediction performance of models trained by non‐standardized, low‐quality images. Our findings demonstrate that existing databases can be used to train models and successfully classify images from unexplored biota, but the imaging conditions and classification algorithms need careful consideration.
Funder
Agencia Estatal de Investigación
Subject
Insect Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
5 articles.
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