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Main Authors: Malladi, Lakshmi Aishwarya, Gupta, Navarun, El-Sayed, Ahmed, Xiong, Xingguo
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.19479
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author Malladi, Lakshmi Aishwarya
Gupta, Navarun
El-Sayed, Ahmed
Xiong, Xingguo
author_facet Malladi, Lakshmi Aishwarya
Gupta, Navarun
El-Sayed, Ahmed
Xiong, Xingguo
contents Over 8,024 wildfire incidents have been documented in 2024 alone, affecting thousands of fatalities and significant damage to infrastructure and ecosystems. Wildfires in the United States have inflicted devastating losses. Wildfires are becoming more frequent and intense, which highlights how urgently efficient warning systems are needed to avoid disastrous outcomes. The goal of this study is to enhance the accuracy of wildfire detection by using Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) built on the VGG16 architecture. The D-FIRE dataset, which includes several kinds of wildfire and non-wildfire images, was employed in the study. Low-resolution images, dataset imbalance, and the necessity for real-time applicability are some of the main challenges. These problems were resolved by enriching the dataset using data augmentation techniques and optimizing the VGG16 model for binary classification. The model produced a low false negative rate, which is essential for reducing unexplored fires, despite dataset boundaries. In order to help authorities execute fast responses, this work shows that deep learning models such as VGG16 can offer a reliable, automated approach for early wildfire recognition. For the purpose of reducing the impact of wildfires, our future work will concentrate on connecting to systems with real-time surveillance networks and enlarging the dataset to cover more varied fire situations.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2505_19479
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Revolutionizing Wildfire Detection with Convolutional Neural Networks: A VGG16 Model Approach
Malladi, Lakshmi Aishwarya
Gupta, Navarun
El-Sayed, Ahmed
Xiong, Xingguo
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Machine Learning
Over 8,024 wildfire incidents have been documented in 2024 alone, affecting thousands of fatalities and significant damage to infrastructure and ecosystems. Wildfires in the United States have inflicted devastating losses. Wildfires are becoming more frequent and intense, which highlights how urgently efficient warning systems are needed to avoid disastrous outcomes. The goal of this study is to enhance the accuracy of wildfire detection by using Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) built on the VGG16 architecture. The D-FIRE dataset, which includes several kinds of wildfire and non-wildfire images, was employed in the study. Low-resolution images, dataset imbalance, and the necessity for real-time applicability are some of the main challenges. These problems were resolved by enriching the dataset using data augmentation techniques and optimizing the VGG16 model for binary classification. The model produced a low false negative rate, which is essential for reducing unexplored fires, despite dataset boundaries. In order to help authorities execute fast responses, this work shows that deep learning models such as VGG16 can offer a reliable, automated approach for early wildfire recognition. For the purpose of reducing the impact of wildfires, our future work will concentrate on connecting to systems with real-time surveillance networks and enlarging the dataset to cover more varied fire situations.
title Revolutionizing Wildfire Detection with Convolutional Neural Networks: A VGG16 Model Approach
topic Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Machine Learning
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.19479