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easyCT

Camera trap data anlaysis easier than ever before thanks to machine learning classification.


Thorough description.

Time analysis.

Training your model.

Classification.

Description

This is an application intended to run locally on your computer in a web browser of your choice. It allows you to load your photos from a camera trap survey and analyze them using a machine learning classifier. You can also get some insight into the distribution of your photos over time.

The app was created in R Shiny. It uses many R and Python libraries. Exiftool is used for extracting metadata from photos. The machine learning part is based on Tensorflow.

Prerequisites

Warning: Due to the new architecture of Apple computers (i.e. Apple Silicon M1 onwards), they are not currently supported. If you still want to use the app on Apple Silicon, you can install R, Python, and Perl with Apple's Tensorflow. Then, try following the remaining instructions in Dockerfile.

Docker

You need to have Docker installed on your machine. The way of installing it differs depending on the operating system:

  • Docker on Windows

    • The easiest way to use it is to download Docker Desktop.
    • This is the hardest part you need to go through before using the app. Hence, make sure you familiarize yourself with the official manual.
    • In particual, you need to have Virtualization enabled on your machine.
    • If you don't know what is WSL, don't select WSL2 backend while you install Docker Desktop (choose Hyper-V backend instead).
  • Docker on Mac (Intel chip only)

  • Docker on Linux

Web browser

You must have a modern web browser to see the application (Chrome, Opera, Safari, Firefox, etc).

Installing the app

Installation and execution is done inside a command-line interface existing inside your operating system. If you use Windows, open Command Prompt (CMD); on MacOS and Linux open Terminal. Then, copy-paste the commands below.

Important: Make sure Docker is running in the background before executing the commands below. If you have installed Docker Desktop, you need to open this application beforehand (otherwise you will see a warning saying the docker daemon is not running). If you only use Docker Engine on Linux, you need to open docker daemon in a separate terminal tab.

  • First command: Pull the official image from Docker Hub:
docker pull dzionek/easy-ct:latest

This may take a while as you need to download a few gigabytes. In the meantime, you can enjoy a cup of tea or coffee. Make sure you have enough space on your drive and you don't close the command-line interface during this process.

Running the app

The application will run inside a virtual machine environment. This external environment doesn't normally have access to the files stored on your machine. Hence, you need to explicitly provide the path to the directory you want to share with the app. If you have installed Docker Desktop in the previous steps, then open Docker Desktop and go to Settings > Resources > File Sharing. Then, add your path to the directory you want to share and apply changes. In case of problems, check File Sharing manual for Windows or Mac.

  • Second command: Run the image. You need to modify the part with square brackets. Substitute [PUT YOUR PATH HERE] with the path containing your photo directories.
docker run -d --rm -p 3838:3838 -v [PUT YOUR PATH HERE]:/root/photos dzionek/easy-ct

The application will be available after about one minute at http://localhost:3838/.

Example of installing and running the app

Suppose I use Windows and have my camera trap photos stored on an external hard drive in a folder H:\camera_traps\site01. I add this path inside Docker Desktop's Settings > Resources > File Sharing. Then, all I need to do (for installing and running) is paste:

docker pull dzionek/easy-ct:latest
docker run -d --rm -p 3838:3838 -v H:\camera_traps\site01:/root/photos dzionek/easy-ct

After that, I wait 1 minute so that my application is ready. Then, I open my favourite web browser (say Firefox) and go to the link http://localhost:3838/. The photos stored at H:\camera_traps\site01 will be available inside Home/photos directory within the web application.

Stopping the app

If you want to close the app after using it and free your computer memory, you can do this by closing Docker. If you use Docker Desktop, make sure it is closed.

For example, on Windows, you can find Docker Desktop icon on the right side of your taskbar. If the icon is hidden, extend the list of icons with the up arrow.

Note that when you want to open the app again, you will need to open Docker and use the command from Running the app section:

docker run -d --rm -p 3838:3838 -v [PUT YOUR PATH HERE]:/root/photos dzionek/easy-ct

Updating the app

If you want to update the app, you need to stop it first. Then, open Docker and use the command from Installing the app section:

docker pull dzionek/easy-ct:latest

If your app can be updated, this will pull the latest image. If your version is up to date, you will see Status: Image is up to date for dzionek/easy-ct:latest.

Author

The project was created by Bartosz Dzionek during his Research Experience Placement 2021 at the Zoological Society of London and Imperial College London. Many thanks to Dr. Marcus Rowcliffe, Verity Miles, and others for supervision and great advice.

The application is based on a binary classifier developed by the ZSL and available at https://github.com/Zoological-Society-of-London/camtrap_classifier.

Contributing

Pull requests are welcome. You can build your Docker image locally using:

docker build -t dzionek/easy-ct:test . 

For major changes, please open an issue first to discuss what you would like to change.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.

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