Precise identification of early peanut leaf spot is strategically significant for safeguarding oilseed supplies and reducing pesticide reliance. However, general-purpose detectors face severe domain adaptation bottlenecks in unstructured field environments due to small feature dissipation, physical occlusion, and class imbalance. To address this, this study constructs a dataset spanning two phenological cycles and proposes POD-YOLO, a physics-aware and dynamics-optimized lightweight framework. Anchored on the YOLOv10n architecture and adhering to a “data-centric” philosophy, the framework optimizes the parameter convergence path via a synergistic “Augmentation-Loss-Optimization” mechanism: (1) Input Stage: A Physical Domain Reconstruction (PDR) module is introduced to simulate physical occlusion, blocking shortcut learning and constructing a robust feature space; (2) Loss Stage: A Loss Manifold Reshaping (LMR) mechanism is established utilizing dual-branch constraints to suppress background gradients and enhance small target localization; and (3) Optimization Stage: A Decoupled Dynamic Scheduling (DDS) strategy is implemented, integrating AdamW with cosine annealing to ensure smooth convergence on small-sample data. Experimental results demonstrate that POD-YOLO achieves a 9.7% precision gain over the baseline and 83.08% recall, all while maintaining a low computational cost of 8.4 GFLOPs. This study validates the feasibility of exploiting the potential of lightweight architectures through optimization dynamics, offering an efficient paradigm for edge-based intelligent plant protection.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Yongpeng Liang
Lei Zhao
Wenxin Zhao
Applied Sciences
Qingdao Agricultural University
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Liang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6975b24dfeba4585c2d6dd67 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/app16031162