Mingzhou Lu, Tomas Norton, Ali Youssef, Nemanja Radojkovic, Alberto Peña Fernández, Daniel Berckmans. Extracting body surface dimensions from top-view images of pigs[J]. International Journal of Agricultural and Biological Engineering, 2018, 11(5): 182-191. DOI: 10.25165/j.ijabe.20181105.4054
Citation: Mingzhou Lu, Tomas Norton, Ali Youssef, Nemanja Radojkovic, Alberto Peña Fernández, Daniel Berckmans. Extracting body surface dimensions from top-view images of pigs[J]. International Journal of Agricultural and Biological Engineering, 2018, 11(5): 182-191. DOI: 10.25165/j.ijabe.20181105.4054

Extracting body surface dimensions from top-view images of pigs

  • Continuous live weight and carcass traits estimation are important for the pig production and breeding industry. It is widely known that top-view images of a pig’s body (excluding its head and neck) reveal surface dimension parameters, which are correlated with live weight and carcass traits. However, because a pig is not constrained when an image is captured, the body does not always have a straight posture. This creates a big challenge when extracting the body surface dimension parameters, and consequently the live weight and carcass traits estimation has a high level of uncertainty. The primary goal of this study is to propose an algorithm to automatically extract pig body surface dimension parameters, with a better accuracy, from top-view pig images. Firstly, the backbone line of a pig was extracted. Secondly, lengths of line segments perpendicular to the backbone line were calculated, and then feature points on the pig’s contour line were extracted based on the lengths variation of the perpendicular line segments. Thirdly, the head and neck of the pig were removed from the pig’s contour by an ellipse. Finally, four length and one area parameters were calculated. The proposed algorithm was implemented in Matlab® (R2012b) and applied to 126 depth images of pigs. Taking the results of the manual labeling tool as the gold standard, the length and area parameters could be obtained by the proposed algorithm with an accuracy of 97.71% (SE=1.64%) and 97.06% (SE=1.82%), respectively. These parameters can be used to improve pig live weight and carcass traits estimation accuracy in the future work.
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