The Development of a Sorting System Based on Point Cloud Weight Estimation for Fattening Pigs
Luo Liu | Yangsen Ou | Zhenan Zhao | Mingxia Shen | Ruqian Zhao | Longshen Liu
As large-scale and intensive fattening pig farming has become mainstream, the increase in farm size has led to more severe issues related to the hierarchy within pig groups. Due to genetic differences among individual fattening pigs, those that grow faster enjoy a higher social rank. Larger pigs with greater aggression continuously acquire more resources, further restricting the survival space of weaker pigs. Therefore, fattening pigs must be grouped rationally, and the management of weaker pigs must be enhanced. This study, considering current fattening pig farming needs and actual production environments, designed and implemented an intelligent sorting system based on weight estimation. The main hardware structure of the partitioning equipment includes a collection channel, partitioning channel, and gantry-style collection equipment. Experimental data were collected, and the original scene point cloud was preprocessed to extract the back point cloud of fattening pigs. Based on the morphological characteristics of the fattening pigs, the back point cloud segmentation method was used to automatically extract key features such as hip width, hip height, shoulder width, shoulder height, and body length. The segmentation algorithm first calculates the centroid of the point cloud and the eigenvectors of the covariance matrix to reconstruct the point cloud coordinate system. Then, based on the variation characteristics and geometric shape of the consecutive horizontal slices of the point cloud, hip width and shoulder width slices are extracted, and the related features are calculated. Weight estimation was performed using Random Forest, Multilayer perceptron (MLP), linear regression based on the least squares method, and ridge regression models, with parameter tuning using Bayesian optimization. The mean squared error, mean absolute error, and mean relative error were used as evaluation metrics to assess the model’s performance. Finally, the classification capability was evaluated using the median and average weights of the fattening pigs as partitioning standards. The experimental results show that the system’s average relative error in weight estimation is approximately 2.90%, and the total time for the partitioning process is less than 15 s, which meets the needs of practical production.
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