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Towards improving prediction accuracy and user-level explainability using deep learning and knowledge graphs: A study on cassava disease.

Authors :
Chhetri, Tek Raj
Hohenegger, Armin
Fensel, Anna
Kasali, Mariam Aramide
Adekunle, Asiru Afeez
Source :
Expert Systems with Applications. Dec2023, Vol. 233, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Food security is currently a major concern due to the growing global population, the exponential increase in food demand, the deterioration of soil quality, the occurrence of numerous diseases, and the effects of climate change on crop yield. Sustainable agriculture is necessary to solve this food security challenge. Disruptive technologies, such as of artificial intelligence, especially, deep learning techniques can contribute to agricultural sustainability. For example, applying deep learning techniques for early disease classification allows us to take timely action, thereby helping to increase the yield without inflicting unnecessary environmental damage, such as excessive use of fertilisers or pesticides. Several studies have been conducted on agricultural sustainability using deep learning techniques and also semantic web technologies such as ontologies and knowledge graphs. However, the three major challenges remain: (i) the lack of explainability of deep learning-based systems (e.g. disease information), especially to non-experts like farmers; (ii) a lack of contextual information (e.g. soil or plant information) and domain-expert knowledge in deep learning-based systems; and (iii) the lack of pattern learning ability of systems based on the semantic web, despite their ability to incorporate domain knowledge. Therefore, this paper presents the work on disease classification, addressing the challenges as mentioned earlier by combining deep learning and semantic web technologies, namely ontologies and knowledge graphs. The findings are: (i) 0.905 (90.5%) prediction accuracy on large noisy dataset; (ii) ability to generate user-level explanations about disease and incorporate contextual and domain knowledge; (iii) the average prediction latency of 3.8514 s on 5268 samples; (iv) 95% of users finding the explanation of the proposed method useful; and (v) 85% of users being able to understand generated explanations easily—show that the proposed method is superior to the state-of-the-art in terms of performance and explainability and is also suitable for real-world scenarios. • Combining deep learning and semantic technology improves accuracy on noisy dataset. • Semantic technology enables generating user friendly natural language explanation. • 95% of users find explanations based on the proposed approach useful. • 85% of users can comprehend the explanations provided by the proposed approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09574174
Volume :
233
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Expert Systems with Applications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
171113476
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eswa.2023.120955