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Fruit detection is crucial for yield estimation and fruit picking system performance. Many state-of-the-art methods for fruit detection use convolutional neural networks (CNNs). This paper presents the results for peach detection by applying a faster R-CNN framework in images captured from an outdoor orchard. Although this method has been used in other studies to detect fruits, there is no research on peaches. Since the fruit colors, sizes, shapes, tree branches, fruit bunches, and distributions in trees are particular, the development of a fruit detection procedure is specific. The results show great potential in using this method to detect this type of fruit. A detection accuracy of 0.90 using the metric average precision (AP) was achieved for fruit detection. Precision agriculture applications, such as deep neural networks (DNNs), as proposed in this paper, can help to mitigate climate change, due to horticultural activities by accurate product prediction, leading to improved resource management (e.g., irrigation water, nutrients, herbicides, pesticides), and helping to reduce food loss and waste via improved agricultural activity scheduling.
Within the scope of precision agriculture, many applications have been developed to support decision making and yield enhancement. Fruit detection has attracted considerable attention from researchers, and it can be used offline. In contrast, some applications, such as robot vision in orchards, require computer vision models to run on edge devices while performing inferences at high speed. In this area, most modern applications use an integrated graphics processing unit (GPU). In this work, we propose the use of a tensor processing unit (TPU) accelerator with a Raspberry Pi target device and the state-of-the-art, lightweight, and hardware-aware MobileDet detector model. Our contribution is the extension of the possibilities of using accelerators (the TPU) for edge devices in precision agriculture. The proposed method was evaluated using a novel dataset of peaches with three cultivars, which will be made available for further studies. The model achieved an average precision (AP) of 88.2% and a performance of 19.84 frames per second (FPS) at an image size of 640 × 480. The results obtained show that the TPU accelerator can be an excellent alternative for processing on the edge in precision agriculture.