Saturday, May 18, 2024

Virtual and actual realities help farm decision-making

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Lincoln Agritech to show off augmented reality tech at Fieldays.
By looking at a QR code, a headset-wearing farmer can bring up paddock data to support what they see.
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Lincoln Agritech is working with DairyNZ to find out how augmented reality technology could improve on-farm decision-making.

Augmented reality (AR) is a fast-growing technology that adds information to what people can perceive with their senses.

For example, using a headset, special spectacles, or earphones, it may provide data about an object or animal a person is looking at, such as the health or performance data of a cow.

“We are scoping out what is currently possible, and what may be possible in the near future,” Abbas Jafari, one of Lincoln Agritech’s precision agriculture scientists, said. 

“And we are also asking farmers, farm consultants, and veterinarians what they would find useful. They have been enthusiastic about the possibilities.”

After working with industry organisations, Lincoln Agritech selected three possible use cases to investigate. 

These are:

-How effective is AR in providing information about paddocks to support grazing management?

-How can AR help farm staff to learn how to use and maintain complex equipment such as tractors if reading through manuals is too time consuming?

-How can AR improve staff training and consistency in body condition scoring of cows?

Working with one Canterbury farmer, Lincoln Agritech intern Joost Scholten (from Wageningen University & Research in The Netherlands), has developed an app for a Hololens 2 headset that provides useful on-the-spot information about a paddock. 

The paddock gate is marked with a QR code. 

When the farmer looks at the QR code through the headset, the AR equipment identifies and pulls up useful data about the paddock.

The next step is to work with a Lincoln University dairy farm to quantify how AR can help with cow body condition scoring.

“To bring this to farmers, by the end of this year we hope to have enough information to create a prototypical solution in a new project for industry to test,” Lincoln Agritech’s group manager of precision agriculture said.

“The team has shown the possibilities of AR for dairy farming are really very exciting.”

Visitors to Fieldays will be able to see a demonstration of augmented reality on dairy farms at the Lincoln Agritech stand, site PD24.

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