Automatic In Situ Identification of Plankton
Abstract
Earth's oceans are a soup of living micro-organisms known as plankton.
As the foundation of the food chain for marine life, plankton are also
an integral component of the global carbon cycle which regulates the
planet's temperature. In this paper, we present a technique for automatic
identification of plankton using a variety of features and classification
methods including ensembles.
The images were obtained in situ by an instrument known as the Flow
Cytometer And Microscope (FlowCAM), that detects particles from a
stream of water siphoned directly from the ocean. The images are of
necessity of limited resolution, making their identification a rather
difficult challenge. We expect that upon completion, our system will
become a useful tool for marine biologists to assess the health of the
world's oceans.
BiBTex Entry
@inproceedings{blaschko-plankton-wacv05,
author = {M. Blaschko and G. Holness and M. Mattar and D. Lisin and P. Utgoff and A. Hanson and H. Schultz and E. Riseman and M. Sieracki and W. Balch and B. Tupper},
title = {Automatic In Situ Identification of Plankton},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the IEEE Workshop on Applications of Computer Vision},
location = {Breckenridge, CO}
month = {January},
year = {2005}
}