Optimal partner wavelength combination method applied to NIR spectroscopic analysis of human serum globulin

3Citations
Citations of this article
2Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Human serum globulin (GLB), which contains various antibodies in healthy human serum, is of great significance for clinical trials and disease diagnosis. In this study, the GLB in human serum was rapidly analyzed by near infrared (NIR) spectroscopy without chemical reagents. Optimal partner wavelength combination (OPWC) method was employed for selecting discrete information wavelength. For the OPWC, the redundant wavelengths were removed by repeated projection iteration based on binary linear regression, and the result converged to stable number of wavelengths. By the way, the convergence of algorithm was proved theoretically. Moving window partial least squares (MW-PLS) and Monte Carlo uninformative variable elimination PLS (MC-UVE-PLS) methods, which are two well-performed wavelength selection methods, were also performed for comparison. The optimal models were obtained by the three methods, and the corresponding root-mean-square error of cross validation and correlation coefficient of prediction (SECV, RP,CV) were 0.813 g L-1 and 0.978 with OPWC combined with PLS (OPWC-PLS), and 0.804 g L-1 and 0.979 with MW-PLS, and 1.153 g L-1 and 0.948 with MC-UVE-PLS, respectively. The OPWC-PLS and MW-PLS methods achieved almost the same good results. However, the OPWC only contained 28 wavelengths, so it had obvious lower model complexity. Thus it can be seen that the OPWC-PLS has great prediction performance for GLB and its algorithm is convergent and rapid. The results provide important technical support for the rapid detection of serum.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Han, Y., Zhong, Y., Zhou, H., & Kuang, X. (2020). Optimal partner wavelength combination method applied to NIR spectroscopic analysis of human serum globulin. BMC Chemistry, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13065-020-00689-z

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free