Statistical and Neural Methods for Site-Specific Yield Prediction

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2003-01-01
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Drummond, Scott
Sudduth, Kenneth
Joshi, Anupam
Birrell, Stuart
Kitchen, Newell
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Birrell, Stuart
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Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering

Since 1905, the Department of Agricultural Engineering, now the Department of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering (ABE), has been a leader in providing engineering solutions to agricultural problems in the United States and the world. The department’s original mission was to mechanize agriculture. That mission has evolved to encompass a global view of the entire food production system–the wise management of natural resources in the production, processing, storage, handling, and use of food fiber and other biological products.

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In 1905 Agricultural Engineering was recognized as a subdivision of the Department of Agronomy, and in 1907 it was recognized as a unique department. It was renamed the Department of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering in 1990. The department merged with the Department of Industrial Education and Technology in 2004.

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1905–present

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  • Department of Agricultural Engineering (1907–1990)

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Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering
Abstract

Understanding the relationships between yield and soil properties and topographic characteristics is of critical importance in precision agriculture. A necessary first step is to identify techniques to reliably quantify the relationships between soil and topographic characteristics and crop yield. Stepwise multiple linear regression (SMLR), projection pursuit regression (PPR), and several types of supervised feed–forward neural networks were investigated in an attempt to identify methods able to relate soil properties and grain yields on a point–by–point basis within ten individual site–years. To avoid overfitting, evaluations were based on predictive ability using a 5–fold cross–validation technique. The neural techniques consistently outperformed both SMLR and PPR and provided minimal prediction errors in every site–year. However, in site–years with relatively fewer observations and in site–years where a single, overriding factor was not apparent, the improvements achieved by neural networks over both SMLR and PPR were small. A second phase of the experiment involved estimation of crop yield across multiple site–years by including climatological data. The ten site–years of data were appended with climatological variables, and prediction errors were computed. The results showed that significant overfitting had occurred and indicated that a much larger number of climatologically unique site–years would be required in this type of analysis.

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This article is from Transactions of the ASAE 46 (2003): 5–14, doi:10.13031/2013.12541.

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