Journal of Marine Science and Engineering (Oct 2023)

Research on Black Smoke Detection and Class Evaluation Method for Ships Based on YOLOv5s-CMBI Multi-Feature Fusion

  • Shipeng Wang,
  • Yang Han,
  • Mengmeng Yu,
  • Haiyan Wang,
  • Zhen Wang,
  • Guangzheng Li,
  • Haochen Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse11101945
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
p. 1945

Abstract

Read online

To enhance the real-time detection accuracy of ship exhaust plumes and further quantify the degree of darkness, this study proposes a multi-feature fusion approach that combines the YOLOv5s-CMBI algorithm for ship exhaust plume detection with the Ringerman Blackness-based grading method. Firstly, diverse datasets are integrated and a subset of the data is subjected to standard optical model aerosolization to form a dataset for ship exhaust plume detection. Subsequently, building upon the YOLOv5s architecture, the CBAM convolutional attention mechanism is incorporated to augment the network’s focus on ship exhaust plume regions while suppressing irrelevant information. Simultaneously, inspired by the BiFPN structure with weighted bidirectional feature pyramids, a lightweight network named Tiny-BiFPN is devised to enable multi-path feature fusion. The Adaptive Spatial Feature Fusion (ASFF) mechanism is introduced to counteract the impact of feature scale disparities. The EIoU_Loss is employed as the localization loss function to enhance both regression accuracy and convergence speed of the model. Lastly, leveraging the k-means clustering algorithm, color information is mined through histogram analysis to determine clustering centers. The Mahalanobis distance is used to compute sample similarity, and the Ringerman Blackness-based method is employed to categorize darkness levels. Ship exhaust plume grades are estimated by computing a weighted average grayscale ratio between the effective exhaust plume region and the background region. Experimental results reveal that the proposed algorithm achieves improvements of approximately 3.8% in detection accuracy, 5.7% in recall rate, and 4.6% in mean average precision (mAP0.5) compared to the original model. The accuracy of ship exhaust plume darkness grading attains 92.1%. The methodology presented in this study holds significant implications for the establishment and application of future ship exhaust plume monitoring mechanisms.

Keywords