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Nondestructive measurement of soluble solids content in apple using near infrared hyperspectral imaging coupled with wavelength selection algorithm

•Nondestructive measurement of apple SSC was explored using NIR HSI.•Different feature selection methods were used to determine effective wavelengths.•PLS and LS-SVR models for SSC prediction were established and compared. Hyperspectral imaging is a promising technique for nondestructive sensing of...

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Published in:Infrared physics & technology 2019-05, Vol.98, p.297-304
Main Authors: Zhang, Dongyan, Xu, Yunfei, Huang, Wenqian, Tian, Xi, Xia, Yu, Xu, Lu, Fan, Shuxiang
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Nondestructive measurement of apple SSC was explored using NIR HSI.•Different feature selection methods were used to determine effective wavelengths.•PLS and LS-SVR models for SSC prediction were established and compared. Hyperspectral imaging is a promising technique for nondestructive sensing of multiple quality attributes of apple fruit. This research evaluated and compared different mathematical models to extract effective wavelengths for measurement of apple soluble solids content (SSC) based on near infrared (NIR) hyperspectral imaging over the spectral region of 1000–2500 nm. A total of 160 samples were prepared for the calibration (n = 120) and prediction (n = 40) sets. Competitive adaptive reweighted sampling (CARS), successive projections algorithm (SPA), random frog (RF), and CARS-SPA, CARS-RF combined algorithms were used for extracting effective wavelengths from hyperspectral images of apples, respectively. Based on the selected effective wavelengths, different models were built and compared for predicting SSC of apple using partial least squares (PLS) and least squared support vector regression (LS-SVR). Among all the models, the models based on the ten effective wavelengths selected by CARS-SPA achieved the best results, with Rp, RMSEP of 0.907, 0.479 °Brix for PLS and 0.917, 0.453 °Brix for LS-SVR, respectively. The overall results indicated that CARS-SPA can be used for selecting the effective wavelengths from hyperspectral data. Both PLS and LS-SVR can be applied to develop calibration models to predict apple SSC. Furthermore, the wavelengths selected by CARS-SPA algorithm has a great potential for online detection of apple SSC.
ISSN:1350-4495
1879-0275
DOI:10.1016/j.infrared.2019.03.026