Non-Destructive Assessment of Microbial Spoilage of Broiler Breast Meat Using Structured Illumination Reflectance Imaging with Machine Learning
Meat quality has gained ample attention owing to increased consumer awareness and competition among poultry processors to deliver premium quality products. Nevertheless, chicken breast meat is susceptible to microbial spoilage resulting in economic and product losses. Conventional approaches such as...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Food analytical methods 2024-05, Vol.17 (5), p.652-663 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Meat quality has gained ample attention owing to increased consumer awareness and competition among poultry processors to deliver premium quality products. Nevertheless, chicken breast meat is susceptible to microbial spoilage resulting in economic and product losses. Conventional approaches such as organoleptic, aerobic plate count (APC), and molecular methods have been employed for assessing the microbiological quality of meat products but suffer various shortcomings. This study was a proof-of-concept evaluation of emerging structured illumination reflectance imaging (SIRI) as a non-destructive, objective means to evaluate microbial spoilage in chicken breast meat. The experimental chicken breast samples were kept on a retail tray for 1–13 days at 3-day intervals and subjected to image acquisition by broadband SIRI at varied spatial frequencies of sinusoidally-modulated structured illumination (0.05–0.40 cycles mm
−1
). The chicken samples were categorized into fresh and spoiled classes using the APC threshold of 5 log
10
CFU g
−1
. Acquired pattern images were demodulated into amplitude component (AC) and direct component (DC) images (corresponding to uniform illumination). Three pre-trained deep learning models, including VGG16, EfficientNetB6, and ResNeXt101, were employed to extract the features from the demodulated images, followed by principal component analysis (PCA) to reduce feature redundancy. The selected PCs were used to build classification models using linear discriminant analysis (LDA) and support vector machine (SVM) separately to distinguish between fresh and spoiled samples. AC images consistently outperformed DC images in the resultant classification performance. When the LDA classifier was used, AC images yielded maximum accuracy improvements of 3.6%–6%, depending on feature type and spatial frequency; with the SVM classifier, AC images achieved maximum improvements of 4.4% to 6.4%. The SVM model with the features extracted by ResNeXt101 from AC images at 0.25 cycles mm
−1
achieved the best overall classification accuracy of 76% in differentiating fresh and spoiled samples. This study shows that the SIRI technique is effective for enhanced assessment of microbial spoilage in broiler breast meat, but more dedicated efforts are needed to improve both hardware and software for practical application. |
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ISSN: | 1936-9751 1936-976X |
DOI: | 10.1007/s12161-024-02605-w |