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Artificial Intelligence in Smart Agriculture Across the Production-to-Postharvest Continuum: Progress, Challenges, and Future Directions

Author

Listed:
  • Junhao Sun

    (School of Mechanical and Automotive Engineering, Liaocheng University, Liaocheng 252000, China)

  • Quanjin Wang

    (School of Mechanical and Automotive Engineering, Liaocheng University, Liaocheng 252000, China)

  • Qinghua Li

    (School of Mechanical and Automotive Engineering, Liaocheng University, Liaocheng 252000, China)

  • Guangfei Xu

    (School of Mechanical and Automotive Engineering, Liaocheng University, Liaocheng 252000, China)

  • Bowen Liang

    (School of Mechanical and Automotive Engineering, Liaocheng University, Liaocheng 252000, China)

  • Chuanzhe Ma

    (School of Mechanical and Automotive Engineering, Liaocheng University, Liaocheng 252000, China)

  • Shiao Tian

    (School of Mechanical and Automotive Engineering, Liaocheng University, Liaocheng 252000, China)

  • Qimin Gao

    (Nanjing Institute of Agricultural Mechanization, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Nanjing 210014, China
    Key Laboratory of Modern Agricultural Equipment, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Nanjing 210014, China)

Abstract

Artificial intelligence is transforming agriculture from a mechanized, labor-intensive sector into a data-driven, perception-enabled, and increasingly autonomous production system. In this review, AI serves as an umbrella term encompassing machine learning, computer vision, and robotic control, among other technologies. We synthesize recent advances across the tillage–sowing–management–harvesting (TSMH) workflow, covering intelligent tillage, precision sowing, field management, and robotic harvesting. The literature shows that AI has significantly improved agricultural perception, prediction, and task-level decision-making. However, large-scale adoption remains constrained by data heterogeneity, limited cross-scene generalization, environmental uncertainty, and insufficient integration across operational stages. Future progress will depend on multimodal data fusion, lightweight and interpretable models, cloud-edge collaboration, and full-chain decision architectures. By framing current research within the TSMH pipeline, this review highlights both technical advances and the critical bottlenecks that must be addressed to move smart agriculture from stage-specific intelligence toward system-level autonomy. Representative studies indicate that AI models can improve soil-property prediction and reduce sowing miss-detection rates to below 3% under controlled or bench-top conditions. However, field deployment may be affected by environmental variability, including illumination changes, dust, vibration, occlusion, and hardware constraints. These limitations highlight the need for robust and edge-compatible architectures.

Suggested Citation

  • Junhao Sun & Quanjin Wang & Qinghua Li & Guangfei Xu & Bowen Liang & Chuanzhe Ma & Shiao Tian & Qimin Gao, 2026. "Artificial Intelligence in Smart Agriculture Across the Production-to-Postharvest Continuum: Progress, Challenges, and Future Directions," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(10), pages 1-25, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:10:p:4908-:d:1942341
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