Abstract: This work examines the viability of self-supervised learning approaches in the field of agri-robotics, specifically focusing on the segmentation of densely packed potato tubers in storage. The work assesses the impact of both the quantity and quality of data on self-supervised training, employing a limited set of both annotated and unannotated data. Mask R-CNN with a ResNet50 backbone is used for instance segmentation to evaluate self-supervised training performance. The results indicate that the self-supervised methods employed have a modest yet beneficial impact on the downstream task. A simpler approach yields more effective results with a larger dataset, whereas a more intricate method shows superior performance with a refined, smaller self-supervised dataset.
External IDs:dblp:conf/taros/HurstBB23
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