Science and Technology Production

ChronoRoot: High-throughput phenotyping by deep segmentation networks reveals novel temporal parameters of plant root system architecture

Article

Authorship:

Gaggion, Nicolás ; Ariel, Federico ; Daric, Vladimir ; Lambert, Éric ; Legendre, Simon ; Roulé, Thomas ; Camoirano, Alejandra ; Milone, Diego H. ; Crespi, Martin ; Blein, Thomas ; FERRANTE, ENZO

Date:

2021

Publishing House and Editing Place:

Oxford University Press

Magazine:

GigaScience, vol. 10 Oxford University Press

Summary *

Background: Deep learning methods have outperformed previous techniques in most computer vision tasks, including image-based plant phenotyping. However, massive data collection of root traits and the development of associated artificial intelligence approaches have been hampered by the inaccessibility of the rhizosphere. Here we present ChronoRoot, a system that combines 3D-printed open-hardware with deep segmentation networks for high temporal resolution phenotyping of plant roots in agarized medium. Results: We developed a novel deep learning-based root extraction method that leverages the latest advances in convolutional neural networks for image segmentation and incorporates temporal consistency into the root system architecture reconstruction process. Automatic extraction of phenotypic parameters from sequences of images allowed a comprehensive characterization of the root system growth dynamics. Furthermore, novel time-associated parameters emerged from the analysis of spectral features derived from temporal signals. Conclusions: Our work shows that the combination of machine intelligence methods and a 3D-printed device expands the possibilities of root high-throughput phenotyping for genetics and natural variation studies, as well as the screening of clock-related mutants, revealing novel root traits. Information provided by the agent in SIGEVA

Key Words

CONVOLUTIONAL NEURAL NETWORKS3D-PRINTED HARDWARETEMPORAL PHENOTYPINGROOT SYSTEM ARCHITECTUREIMAGE SEGMENTATION