LeafyVGG-16: Transfer Learning for Plant Disease Detection with Cyber Risk Analysis
Chiwele, N.; Sweeney, E.; Hossain, K.
Show abstract
Plant disease detection using deep learning is essential for precision agriculture, enabling early and automated crop health monitoring. This study proposes an end-to-end transfer learning pipeline, LeafyVGG-16, for multi-class classification of plant diseases and nutrient deficiencies using a tomato leaf dataset. The framework integrates data preprocessing, augmentation, and a VGG-16 backbone with a two-stage fine-tuning strategy. The proposed model is evaluated against CNN, DenseNet-121, Inception-V3, EfficientNetB0, and ResNet-50, achieving an accuracy of 0.93 with precision, recall, and F1-scores of 0.93, 0.90, and 0.92, respectively. These results demonstrate the effectiveness of transfer learning for fine-grained plant disease recognition. We further evaluate model robustness under adversarial cyber attacks to assess deployment reliability in agricultural systems. Under Fast Gradient Sign Method (FGSM) attacks ({epsilon} = 0.01- 0.05), the model shows an accuracy drop of 1%-7.5%, while Projected Gradient Descent (PGD) attacks ({epsilon} = 0.05, step size = 0.005, 10 iterations) produce similar degradation, highlighting the models vulnerability to adversarial perturbations. These findings highlight potential security and reliability risks in AI-based agricultural decision-making systems. Future work will focus on improving robustness and cyber-resilience and extending this framework to other crops for secure and context-aware deployment in resource-constrained environments.
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