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J. Dairy Sci. 2008. 91:939-949. doi:10.3168/jds.2007-0640
© 2008 American Dairy Science Association ®

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Short-Wave Near-Infrared Spectroscopy of Milk Powder for Brand Identification and Component Analysis

D. Wu, S. Feng and Y. He1

College of Biosystems Engineering and Food Science, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310029, China

1 Corresponding author: yhe{at}zju.edu.cn

The aim of the present paper was to provide new insight into the short-wave near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopic analysis of milk powder. Near-infrared spectra in the 800- to 1,025-nm region of 350 samples were analyzed to determine the brands and quality of milk powders. Brand identification was done by a least squares support vector machine (LS-SVM) model coupled with fast fixed-point independent component analysis (ICA). The correct answer rate of the ICA-LS-SVM model reached as high as 98%, which was better than that of the LS-SVM (95%). Contents of fat, protein, and carbohydrate were determined by the LS-SVM and ICA-LS-SVM models. Both processes offered good determination performance for analyzing the main components in milk powder based on short-wave NIR spectra. The coefficients of determination for prediction and root mean square error of prediction of ICA-LS-SVM were 0.983, 0.231, and 0.982, and 0.161, 0.980, and 0.410, respectively, for the 3 components. However, there were less than 10 input variables in the ICA-LS-SVM model compared with 225 in the LS-SVM model. Thus, the processing time was much shorter and the model was simpler. The results presented in this paper demonstrate that the short-wave NIR region is promising for fast and reliable determination of the brand and main components in milk powder.

Key Words: short-wave near-infrared spectroscopy • milk powder • support vector machine • component analysis







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