Machine learning analysis of wing venation patterns accurately identifies Sarcophagidae, Calliphoridae and Muscidae fly species

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DOI10.5281/zenodo.8162003Zenodo8162003MaRDI QIDQ6698543FDOQ6698543

Dataset published at Zenodo repository.

Zulqarnain Mohamed, Chong Chin Heo, Siew Hwa Tan, Martin Jonanthan Richard Hall, April Hari Wardhana, Tsung Fei Khang, Min Hao Ling, Tania Ivorra

Publication date: 18 July 2023



In medical, veterinary, and forensic entomology, the ease and affordability of image data acquisition have resulted in whole-image analysis becoming an invaluable approach for species identification. Krawtchouk moment invariants are a classical mathematical transformation that can extract local features from an image, thus allowing subtle species-specific biological variations to be accentuated for subsequent analyses. We extracted Krawtchouk moment invariant features from binarised wing images of 759 male fly specimens from the Calliphoridae, Sarcophagidae, and Muscidae families (13 species and a species variant). Subsequently, we trained the Generalized, Unbiased, Interaction Detection and Estimation (GUIDE) random forests classifier using linear discriminants derived from these features and inferred the species identity of specimens from the test samples. Five-fold cross validation results show a 98.56 ± 0.38% (standard error) mean identification accuracy at the family level, and a 91.04 ± 1.33% mean identification accuracy at the species level. The mean F1-score of 0.89 ± 0.02 reflects good balance of precision and recall properties of the model. The present study consolidates findings from previous small pilot studies of the usefulness of wing venation patterns for inferring species identities. Thus, the stage is set for the development of a mature data analytic ecosystem for routine computer image-based identification of fly species that are of medical, veterinary, and forensic importance.







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