Phytoliths can be an important source of information related to environmental and climatic change, as well as to ancient plant use by humans, particularly within the disciplines of paleoecology and archaeology. Currently, phytolith identification and categorization is performed manually by researchers, a time-consuming task liable to misclassifications. The automated classification of phytoliths would allow the standardization of identification processes, avoiding possible biases related to the classification capability of researchers. This paper presents a comparative analysis of six classification methods, using digitized microscopic images to examine the efficacy of different quantitative approaches for characterizing phytoliths. A compr...
The analysis of phytoliths has progressed immensely in recent years. Increases in the number of phyt...
This is the supplementary image collection stored in in repository for the paper under submission. I...
Phytoliths are mostly formed by groundwater silica carried upwards in a plant's vascular system and ...
429 JPG files grouped into 8 folders corresponding to 8 different phytolith morphotypes. Created dur...
Phytoliths, as one of the important sources of microfossils, have been widely used in paleobotany-re...
The number of phytolith studies has increased steadily in the last decades in palaeoecological as we...
Phytoliths are efficient proxies in archaeology, plant taxonomy, palaeoenvironment, and palaeoecolog...
Agricultural origins and dispersals are subjects of fundamental importance to archaeology as well as...
International audienceBackground Phytoliths (microscopic opal silica particles produced in and betwe...
Multiplicity, when different phytolith morphotypes are produced within a taxon, and redundancy, when...
Two methods are commonly used for the extraction of phytoliths from plant material to be used as ref...
Agricultural origins and dispersals are subjects of fundamental importance to archaeology as well as...
Phytoliths are silica casts of plant cells, created within and between living tissues across almost ...
The development of identification criteria for crop plants based on phytoliths is of high relevance ...
Phytoliths are ergastic siliceous substances present abundantly within intercellular spaces as well ...
The analysis of phytoliths has progressed immensely in recent years. Increases in the number of phyt...
This is the supplementary image collection stored in in repository for the paper under submission. I...
Phytoliths are mostly formed by groundwater silica carried upwards in a plant's vascular system and ...
429 JPG files grouped into 8 folders corresponding to 8 different phytolith morphotypes. Created dur...
Phytoliths, as one of the important sources of microfossils, have been widely used in paleobotany-re...
The number of phytolith studies has increased steadily in the last decades in palaeoecological as we...
Phytoliths are efficient proxies in archaeology, plant taxonomy, palaeoenvironment, and palaeoecolog...
Agricultural origins and dispersals are subjects of fundamental importance to archaeology as well as...
International audienceBackground Phytoliths (microscopic opal silica particles produced in and betwe...
Multiplicity, when different phytolith morphotypes are produced within a taxon, and redundancy, when...
Two methods are commonly used for the extraction of phytoliths from plant material to be used as ref...
Agricultural origins and dispersals are subjects of fundamental importance to archaeology as well as...
Phytoliths are silica casts of plant cells, created within and between living tissues across almost ...
The development of identification criteria for crop plants based on phytoliths is of high relevance ...
Phytoliths are ergastic siliceous substances present abundantly within intercellular spaces as well ...
The analysis of phytoliths has progressed immensely in recent years. Increases in the number of phyt...
This is the supplementary image collection stored in in repository for the paper under submission. I...
Phytoliths are mostly formed by groundwater silica carried upwards in a plant's vascular system and ...