Regular crack inspection of tunnels is essential to guarantee their safe operation. At present, the manual detection method is time-consuming, subjective and even dangerous, while the automatic detection method is relatively inaccurate. Detecting tunnel cracks is a challenging task since cracks are tiny, and there are many noise patterns in the tunnel images. This study proposes a deep learning algorithm based on U-Net and a convolutional neural network with alternately updated clique (CliqueNet), called U-CliqueNet, to separate cracks from background in the tunnel images. A consumer-grade DSC-WX700 camera (SONY, Wuxi, China) was used to collect 200 original images, then cracks are manually marked and divided into sub-images with a resolution of 496 × 496 pixels. A total of 60,000 sub-images were obtained in the dataset of tunnel cracks, among which 50,000 were used for training and 10,000 were used for testing. The proposed framework conducted training and testing on this dataset, the mean pixel accuracy (MPA), mean intersection over union (MIoU), precision and F1-score are 92.25%, 86.96%, 86.32% and 83.40%, respectively. We compared the U-CliqueNet with fully convolutional networks (FCN), U-net, Encoder–decoder network (SegNet) and the multi-scale fusion crack detection (MFCD) algorithm using hypothesis testing, and it’s proved that the MIoU predicted by U-CliqueNet was significantly higher than that of the other four algorithms. The area, length and mean width of cracks can be calculated, and the relative error between the detected mean crack width and the actual mean crack width ranges from −11.20% to 18.57%. The results show that this framework can be used for fast and accurate crack semantic segmentation of tunnel images.
Regular inspection of pavement conditions is important to guarantee the safety of transportation. However, current approaches are time-consuming and subjective, which requires the technician to annotate each training image exactly pixel by pixel. To ease the workload of the inspector and lower the cost of acquiring the high-quality training dataset, a semi-supervised method for the pavement crack detection is proposed. Firstly, unlabeled pavement images can be used for the model training in our proposed algorithm, our model can generate a supervisory signal for unlabeled pavement images, which makes up for the deficiency of image annotation. Secondly, an adversarial learning method and a full convolution discriminator are adopted, which can learn to distinguish the ground truth from segmentation predictions. To improve the accuracy of pavement crack detection, the adversarial loss is coupled with the cross-entropy loss in discriminator. Thus, the quality of the training model is no longer dependent on the quantity of the labeled dataset and the accuracy of the labeled. Compared with existing methods that can only employ labeled images, our method utilizes unlabeled images to improve the pavement crack detection accuracy. Moreover, our model is validated on the CFD dataset and AigleRN dataset, the experimental results show that the proposed algorithm is effective. Compared with existing methods, not only can our method detect different types of cracks, but also be particularly effective when only a few labeled are available: when using 118 crack images with a resolution of 480 × 320, using only 50% of the labeled data, the detection accuracy of our model can reach 95.91%.
Regular inspections of bridge substructures are very important for evaluating bridge health, since early detection and assessment offer the best chances of bridge repair. However, the traditional inspection methods of checking defects with visual features cannot meet engineering needs sufficiently. Although deep-learning methods have recently demonstrated a remarkable improvement in image classification and recognition, there are still difficulties, such as the countless parameters and large model training sets needed by these methods. In this paper, we propose a novel crack extraction algorithm for automatic segmentation of cracks and noise using multi-layer features extracted from a fully convolutional network and a naive Bayes data fusion (NB-FCN) model. The bridge images in both the training and testing datasets are taken using an in-house designed high-precision image acquisition device, called Bridge Substructure Detection 10 (BSD-10). BSD-10 is applied to collect 7200 images from ten existing bridges under different illuminants and distances. After gathering the crack datasets, the crack and noise models of the NB-FCN are trained, respectively, with multiple iterations. Next, the skeleton and continuous boundary of a crack are recognized. Then the crack length and width are calculated using electronic distance measurement to verify the error rate of the proposed method. Compared to up-to-date machine-learning-based algorithms, i.e. the crack tree algorithm, the random structured forests algorithm, the relatively competitive convolutional neural networks algorithm, and the fusion convolutional neural network algorithm, the significant superiority of the NB-FCN algorithm in terms of recognition accuracy, computation time, and error rates is illustrated based on different types of crack images of handwriting, peel off, water stains and repair traces. The NB-FCN algorithm is verified with 7200 datasets of bridge substructures collected from 20 in-service bridges under various circumstances. In general, the recognition results show that the proposed algorithm demonstrates a remarkable performance compared to other recent algorithms.
Cracks and exposed steel bars are the main factors that affect the service life of bridges. It is necessary to detect the surface damage during regular bridge inspections. Due to the complex structure of bridges, automatically detecting bridge damage is a challenging task. In the field of crack classification and segmentation, convolutional neural networks have offer advantages, but ordinary networks cannot completely solve the environmental impact problems in reality. To further overcome these problems, in this paper a new algorithm to detect surface damage called EMA-DenseNet is proposed. The main contribution of this article is to redesign the structure of the densely connected convolutional networks (DenseNet) and add the expected maximum attention (EMA) module after the last pooling layer. The EMA module is obviously helpful to the bridge damage feature extraction. Besides, we use a new loss function which considers the connectivity of pixels, it has been proved to be effective in reducing the break point of fracture prediction and improving the accuracy. To train and test the model, we captured many images from multiple bridges located in Zhejiang (China), and then built a dataset of bridge damage images. First, experiments were carried out on an open concrete crack dataset. The mean pixel accuracy (MPA), mean intersection over union (MIoU), precision and frames per second (FPS) of the EMA-DenseNet are 87.42%, 92.59%, 81.97% and 25.4, respectively. Then we also conducted experiments on a more challenging bridge damage dataset, the MIoU, where MPA, precision and FPS were 79.87%, 86.35%, 74.70% and 14.6, respectively. Compared with the current state-of-the-art algorithms, the proposed algorithm is more accurate and robust in bridge damage detection.
Pavement crack detection is essential for safe driving. The traditional manual crack detection method is highly subjective and time-consuming. Hence, an automatic pavement crack detection system is needed to facilitate this progress. However, this is still a challenging task due to the complex topology and large noise interference of crack images. Recently, although deep learning-based technologies have achieved breakthrough progress in crack detection, there are still some challenges, such as large parameters and low detection efficiency. Besides, most deep learning-based crack detection algorithms find it difficult to establish good balance between detection accuracy and detection speed. Inspired by the latest deep learning technology in the field of image processing, this paper proposes a novel crack detection algorithm based on the deep feature aggregation network with the spatial-channel squeeze & excitation (scSE) attention mechanism module, which calls CrackDFANet. Firstly, we cut the collected crack images into 512 × 512 pixel image blocks to establish a crack dataset. Then through iterative optimization on the training and validation sets, we obtained a crack detection model with good robustness. Finally, the CrackDFANet model verified on a total of 3516 images in five datasets with different sizes and containing different noise interferences. Experimental results show that the trained CrackDFANet has strong anti-interference ability, and has better robustness and generalization ability under the interference of light interference, parking line, water stains, plant disturbance, oil stains, and shadow conditions. Furthermore, the CrackDFANet is found to be better than other state-of-the-art algorithms with more accurate detection effect and faster detection speed. Meanwhile, our algorithm model parameters and error rates are significantly reduced.
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