Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8060407 Methods in Oceanography 2016 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
The automated processing of images for scientific analysis has become an integral part of projects that collect large amounts of data. Our recent study of cuttlefish camouflaging behavior captured ∼12,000 images of the animals' response to changing visual environments. This work presents an automated segmentation and classification workflow to alleviate the human cost of processing this complex data set. The specimens' bodies are segmented from the background using a combination of intensity thresholding and Histogram of Oriented Gradients. Subregions are then used to train a texton-based classifier designed to codify traditional, manual methods of cuttlefish image analysis. The segmentation procedure properly selected the subregion from ∼95% of the images. The classifier achieved an accuracy of ∼94% as compared to manual annotation. Together, the process correctly processed ∼90% of the images. Additionally, we leverage the output of the classifier to propose a model of camouflage display that attributes a given display to a superposition of the user-defined classes.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Oceanography
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