Apple detection is a core perception task for harvesting robots operating in complex orchard environments. Targets are frequently affected by branch–foliage occlusion, alternating front/side/back lighting, and strong local illumination fluctuations, which blur object boundaries against background textures and substantially increase detection difficulty. To improve target perception under these conditions, we propose an improved detector, YOLOv11-CBMES. First, based on YOLOv11, we replace the original neck with a weighted BiFPN to enhance cross-scale feature fusion under occlusion. Second, we introduce a Contrast-Driven Feature Aggregation (CDFA) module at the P5 stage, using Haar wavelet decomposition to decouple low-frequency illumination components from high-frequency structural components. Third, we reconstruct spatial feature learning and the upsampling pathway using CSP-based multi-scale blocks and efficient upsampling blocks, and embed a zero-parameter Shift-Context strategy to strengthen local neighbourhood interaction. Finally, we formulate apple detection as a three-class occlusion classification task (No Occlusion, Soft Occlusion, and Hard Occlusion) to support occlusion-aware target recognition. On the apple occlusion dataset, YOLOv11-CBMES achieves mAPNO = 83.50%, mAPSO = 67.36%, and mAPHO = 51.90% at IoU = 0.5. Compared with YOLOv11n under the same training protocol, the gains are +2.16 pp (NO), +3.68 pp (SO), and +5.31 pp (HO), with the largest improvement observed in Hard Occlusion (HO). The results indicate that introducing frequency-domain structural processing into the detection framework improves apple occlusion classification and object detection performance, and provides a theoretical basis for designing perception modules for end-effector operations in apple harvesting robots.
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Long Gao
P. Y. Wang
L. F. Liu
Agronomy
Hebei Agricultural University
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Gao et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69df2cb9e4eeef8a2a6b2019 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy16080790
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