An explainable vision transformer with transfer learning based efficient drought stress identification.

Journal: Plant molecular biology
Published Date:

Abstract

Early detection of drought stress is critical for taking timely measures for reducing crop loss before the drought impact becomes irreversible. The subtle phenotypical and physiological changes in response to drought stress are captured by non-invasive imaging techniques and these imaging data serve as valuable resource for machine learning methods to identify drought stress. While convolutional neural networks are in wide use, vision transformers (ViTs) present a promising alternative in capturing long-range dependencies and intricate spatial relationships, thereby enhancing the detection of subtle indicators of drought stress. We propose an explainable deep learning pipeline that leverages the power of ViTs for drought stress detection in potato crops using aerial imagery. We applied two distinct approaches: a synergistic combination of ViT and support vector machine (SVM), where ViT extracts intricate spatial features from aerial images, and SVM classifies the crops as stressed or healthy and an end-to-end approach using a dedicated classification layer within ViT to directly detect drought stress. Our key findings explain the ViT model's decision-making process by visualizing attention maps. These maps highlight the specific spatial features within the aerial images that the ViT model focuses as the drought stress signature. Our findings demonstrate that the proposed methods not only achieve high accuracy in drought stress identification but also shedding light on the diverse subtle plant features associated with drought stress. This offers a robust and interpretable solution for drought stress monitoring for farmers to undertake informed decisions for improved crop management.

Authors

  • Aswini Kumar Patra
    Department of Computer Science and Engineering, North Eastern Regional Institute of Science and Technology, Nirjuli, India.
  • Ankit Varshney
    Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, Guwahati, India.
  • Lingaraj Sahoo
    Department of Bio-Science and Bio-Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, Guwahati, India. ls@iitg.ac.in.