Re-identification of individuals from images using spot constellations: a case study in Arctic charr ( Salvelinus alpinus)

The ability to re-identify individuals is fundamental to the individual-based studies that are required to estimate many important ecological and evolutionary parameters in wild populations. Traditional methods of marking individuals and tracking them through time can be invasive and imperfect, whic...

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Published in:Royal Society Open Science
Main Authors: Dȩbicki, Ignacy T., Mittell, Elizabeth A., Kristjánsson, Bjarni K., Leblanc, Camille A., Morrissey, Michael B., Terzić, Kasim
Other Authors: Natural Environment Research Council, NVIDIA Corporation, Royal Society, Hólar University, Iceland, Icelandic Research Fund, RANNÍS
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201768
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.201768
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full-xml/10.1098/rsos.201768
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spelling crroyalsociety:10.1098/rsos.201768 2024-06-02T08:00:05+00:00 Re-identification of individuals from images using spot constellations: a case study in Arctic charr ( Salvelinus alpinus) Dȩbicki, Ignacy T. Mittell, Elizabeth A. Kristjánsson, Bjarni K. Leblanc, Camille A. Morrissey, Michael B. Terzić, Kasim Natural Environment Research Council NVIDIA Corporation Royal Society Hólar University, Iceland Icelandic Research Fund, RANNÍS 2021 http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201768 https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.201768 https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full-xml/10.1098/rsos.201768 en eng The Royal Society https://royalsociety.org/journals/ethics-policies/data-sharing-mining/ Royal Society Open Science volume 8, issue 7, page 201768 ISSN 2054-5703 journal-article 2021 crroyalsociety https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201768 2024-05-07T14:16:39Z The ability to re-identify individuals is fundamental to the individual-based studies that are required to estimate many important ecological and evolutionary parameters in wild populations. Traditional methods of marking individuals and tracking them through time can be invasive and imperfect, which can affect these estimates and create uncertainties for population management. Here we present a photographic re-identification method that uses spot constellations in images to match specimens through time. Photographs of Arctic charr ( Salvelinus alpinus ) were used as a case study. Classical computer vision techniques were compared with new deep-learning techniques for masks and spot extraction. We found that a U-Net approach trained on a small set of human-annotated photographs performed substantially better than a baseline feature engineering approach. For matching the spot constellations, two algorithms were adapted, and, depending on whether a fully or semi-automated set-up is preferred, we show how either one or a combination of these algorithms can be implemented. Within our case study, our pipeline both successfully identified unmarked individuals from photographs alone and re-identified individuals that had lost tags, resulting in an approximately 4% increase in our estimate of survival rate. Overall, our multi-step pipeline involves little human supervision and could be applied to many organisms. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic charr Arctic Salvelinus alpinus The Royal Society Arctic Royal Society Open Science 8 7 201768
institution Open Polar
collection The Royal Society
op_collection_id crroyalsociety
language English
description The ability to re-identify individuals is fundamental to the individual-based studies that are required to estimate many important ecological and evolutionary parameters in wild populations. Traditional methods of marking individuals and tracking them through time can be invasive and imperfect, which can affect these estimates and create uncertainties for population management. Here we present a photographic re-identification method that uses spot constellations in images to match specimens through time. Photographs of Arctic charr ( Salvelinus alpinus ) were used as a case study. Classical computer vision techniques were compared with new deep-learning techniques for masks and spot extraction. We found that a U-Net approach trained on a small set of human-annotated photographs performed substantially better than a baseline feature engineering approach. For matching the spot constellations, two algorithms were adapted, and, depending on whether a fully or semi-automated set-up is preferred, we show how either one or a combination of these algorithms can be implemented. Within our case study, our pipeline both successfully identified unmarked individuals from photographs alone and re-identified individuals that had lost tags, resulting in an approximately 4% increase in our estimate of survival rate. Overall, our multi-step pipeline involves little human supervision and could be applied to many organisms.
author2 Natural Environment Research Council
NVIDIA Corporation
Royal Society
Hólar University, Iceland
Icelandic Research Fund, RANNÍS
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Dȩbicki, Ignacy T.
Mittell, Elizabeth A.
Kristjánsson, Bjarni K.
Leblanc, Camille A.
Morrissey, Michael B.
Terzić, Kasim
spellingShingle Dȩbicki, Ignacy T.
Mittell, Elizabeth A.
Kristjánsson, Bjarni K.
Leblanc, Camille A.
Morrissey, Michael B.
Terzić, Kasim
Re-identification of individuals from images using spot constellations: a case study in Arctic charr ( Salvelinus alpinus)
author_facet Dȩbicki, Ignacy T.
Mittell, Elizabeth A.
Kristjánsson, Bjarni K.
Leblanc, Camille A.
Morrissey, Michael B.
Terzić, Kasim
author_sort Dȩbicki, Ignacy T.
title Re-identification of individuals from images using spot constellations: a case study in Arctic charr ( Salvelinus alpinus)
title_short Re-identification of individuals from images using spot constellations: a case study in Arctic charr ( Salvelinus alpinus)
title_full Re-identification of individuals from images using spot constellations: a case study in Arctic charr ( Salvelinus alpinus)
title_fullStr Re-identification of individuals from images using spot constellations: a case study in Arctic charr ( Salvelinus alpinus)
title_full_unstemmed Re-identification of individuals from images using spot constellations: a case study in Arctic charr ( Salvelinus alpinus)
title_sort re-identification of individuals from images using spot constellations: a case study in arctic charr ( salvelinus alpinus)
publisher The Royal Society
publishDate 2021
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201768
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.201768
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full-xml/10.1098/rsos.201768
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic charr
Arctic
Salvelinus alpinus
genre_facet Arctic charr
Arctic
Salvelinus alpinus
op_source Royal Society Open Science
volume 8, issue 7, page 201768
ISSN 2054-5703
op_rights https://royalsociety.org/journals/ethics-policies/data-sharing-mining/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.201768
container_title Royal Society Open Science
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