Classification of foodborne pathogens using near infrared (NIR) laser scatter imaging system with multivariate calibration

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Abstract

An optical sensor system, namely NIR laser scatter imaging system, was developed for rapid and noninvasive classification of foodborne pathogens. This developed system was used for images acquisition. The current study is focused on exploring the potential of this system combined with multivariate calibrations in classifying three categories of popular bacteria. Initially, normalization and Zernike moments extraction were performed, and the resultant translation, scale and rotation invariances were applied as the characteristic variables for subsequent discriminant analysis. Both linear (LDA, KNN and PLSDA) and nonlinear (BPANN, SVM and OSELM) pattern recognition methods were employed comparatively for modeling, and optimized by cross validation. Experimental results showed that the performances of nonlinear tools were superior to those of linear tools, especially for OSELM model with 95% discrimination rate in the prediction set. The overall results showed that it is extremely feasible for rapid and noninvasive classifying foodborne pathogens using this developed system combined with appropriate multivariate calibration.

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APA

Pan, W., Zhao, J., & Chen, Q. (2015). Classification of foodborne pathogens using near infrared (NIR) laser scatter imaging system with multivariate calibration. Scientific Reports, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep09524

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