Wild Nature Institute Giraffe Research Uses High Tech Big Data Tools Giraffe are the tallest animal on earth, so naturally scientists have turned to big data solutions for giraffe conservation. Researchers from the Wild Nature Institute are conducting one of the biggest large mammal studies ever undertaken by studying births, deaths, and movements of more than 2,000 giraffe across a 4,000 square kilometre landscape in the Tarangire ecosystem of northern Tanzania, East Africa. Dr. Derek Lee, Principal Scientist of the Wild Nature Institute said, “Giraffe are big animals, so naturally we are using big data to learn where they are doing well, where they are not, and why, so we can protect and connect the areas important to giraffe conservation.” Giraffe populations have sharply declined across Africa due to habitat loss and illegal killing for meat. “We needed new tools to help save giraffes, and there was a perfect storm of technology that made our work possible,” said Lee. Wild Nature Institute scientists use digital photographs of each animal’s unique and unchanging spot patterns to identify them throughout their lives. However, the analysis process is very manually intensive and time-consuming. Many thousands of photos have to be processed per year, and for every photo the giraffe body in the image has to be manually cropped to provide just a giraffe torso to the pattern recognition software. To aid this process, Microsoft scientists have provided a new image processing service to automate the process using machine learning technology deployed on the Microsoft Azure cloud. Using a computer vision object detection algorithm, the Microsoft team trained a program to recognize giraffe torsos using some existing annotated giraffe photos. The program was iteratively improved using an efficient Active Learning process, where the system identified new images and showed its predicted cropping squares on these images to a human who could quickly verify or correct the results. These new images were then fed back into training algorithm to further update and improve the program. The resulting system identifies the location of giraffe torsos in images with a very high accuracy, as can be seen in the example results in the images below. The new system dramatically speeds up the important research being performed by the Wild Nature Institute scientists. “It is wonderful how the Azure team automated this tedious aspect of our work,” said Dr. Derek Lee, Principal Scientist and CEO at Wild Nature Institute. “It used to take us a week to process our new images after a survey, now it is done in minutes!”
See also: Part 1: Matching Photos of the Same Giraffe Using Virtual Supercomputers Coming soon: Part 3: Velocity, Volume, and Variety in Tall Data for Giraffe Conservation
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