Discriminate of moldy chestnut based on near infrared spectroscopy and feature extraction by fourier transform

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Abstract

As near infrared spectra has the characters of multi-variables and strong correlations, to solve the problem, Fourier transform (FT) was used to extract feature variables of shelled chestnuts spectra. FT coefficients and the status of 178 chestnuts were selected as inputs and outputs of the back-propagation neural network (BPNN) classifier to build a recognition model. For comparison, principal component analysis (PCA) was utilized to compress the variables, which then was introduced as input of the neural network model. The results demonstrate that FT is a powerful feature extraction method and is better than PCA as a feature extraction method when employed together with BPNN. When the preprocessing method of standard normal variate transformation(SNV) was carried out and the first 15-point FT coefficients were used as the input, an optimal network structure of 15-6-1 was obtained, where discriminating rates of qualified chestnut, surface moldy chestnut and internal moldy chestnut in prediction set are 100%, 100% and 92.31%, respectively. © 2011 IFIP International Federation for Information Processing.

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Zhou, Z., Li, X., Li, P., Gao, Y., Liu, J., & Wang, W. (2011). Discriminate of moldy chestnut based on near infrared spectroscopy and feature extraction by fourier transform. In IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology (Vol. 344 AICT, pp. 600–607). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-18333-1_73

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