Sensors (Jan 2022)

Litter Detection with Deep Learning: A Comparative Study

  • Manuel Córdova,
  • Allan Pinto,
  • Christina Carrozzo Hellevik,
  • Saleh Abdel-Afou Alaliyat,
  • Ibrahim A. Hameed,
  • Helio Pedrini,
  • Ricardo da S. Torres

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s22020548
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 2
p. 548

Abstract

Read online

Pollution in the form of litter in the natural environment is one of the great challenges of our times. Automated litter detection can help assess waste occurrences in the environment. Different machine learning solutions have been explored to develop litter detection tools, thereby supporting research, citizen science, and volunteer clean-up initiatives. However, to the best of our knowledge, no work has investigated the performance of state-of-the-art deep learning object detection approaches in the context of litter detection. In particular, no studies have focused on the assessment of those methods aiming their use in devices with low processing capabilities, e.g., mobile phones, typically employed in citizen science activities. In this paper, we fill this literature gap. We performed a comparative study involving state-of-the-art CNN architectures (e.g., Faster RCNN, Mask-RCNN, EfficientDet, RetinaNet and YOLO-v5), two litter image datasets and a smartphone. We also introduce a new dataset for litter detection, named PlastOPol, composed of 2418 images and 5300 annotations. The experimental results demonstrate that object detectors based on the YOLO family are promising for the construction of litter detection solutions, with superior performance in terms of detection accuracy, processing time, and memory footprint.

Keywords