2023
Authors
Tosin, R; Monteiro-Silva, F; Martins, R; Cunha, M;
Publication
BIOSYSTEMS ENGINEERING
Abstract
This paper introduces a tomography-like method for assessing grape maturation. It analyses inner tissue spectra through point-of-measurement (POM) sensing. A multi-block hierarchical principal component analysis (MHPCA) algorithm was used for the spectral reconstruction of total grapes (skin, pulp, and seed). Two grape cultivars, Loureiro (white; n = 216) and Vinhao (red; n = 205) were measured at 12 dates after veraison (DAV). The reconstructed spectra showed no significant differences (p < 0.001) from the originals for both grapes. Loureiro had better statistical metrics (Person's correlation coefficient (r) values for: total grape: 0.99, skin: 1; pulp: 1, seed: 0.94) than Vinhao (r values for: total grape: 0.92, skin: 0.92; pulp: 0.95, seed: 0.95). Using self learning artificial intelligence (SL-AI), the following parameters were predicted for both grapes: soluble solids content (%; MAPE <13%), puncture force (N; MAPE <29%), chlorophyll content (a.u.; MAPE <29%), and anthocyanin content (a.u.; MAPE <17%, Vinhao only). When comparing observed values with predicted skin, pulp, and seed spectra, Vinhao showed no statistical differences for most parameters, except pulp chlorophyll on one DAV in the final maturation stage. The same was done with the Loureiro cultivar. Although Loureiro mostly showed no statistical differences in assessed parameters across tissues and dates, variations were found in pulp and skin chlorophyll content and puncture force. This tomography-like approach based on tissue maturation can help viticulturists to access instant data on grape maturation, supporting informed decision-making and promoting more sustainable agricultural practices.
2023
Authors
Tosin, R; Monteiro Silva, F; Martins, R; Cunha, M;
Publication
CSAC 2023
Abstract
2023
Authors
Portis, I; Tosin, R; Oliveira Pinto, R; Pereira Dias, L; Santos, C; Martins, R; Cunha, M;
Publication
Engineering Proceedings
Abstract
This scientific paper delves into the effects of water stress on grapevines, specifically focusing on gene expression and polyphenol production. We conducted a controlled greenhouse experiment with three hydric conditions and analyzed the expression of genes related to polyphenol biosynthesis. Our results revealed significant differences in the expression of ABCC1, a gene linked to anthocyanin metabolism, under different irrigation treatments. These findings highlight the importance of anthocyanins in grapevine responses to abiotic stresses. By integrating genomics, metabolomics, and systems biology, this study contributes to our understanding of grapevine physiology under water stress conditions and offers insights into developing sensor technologies for real-world applications in viticulture. © 2023 by the authors.
2023
Authors
Reis Pereira, M; Tosin, R; Martins, C; Dos Santos, FN; Tavares, F; Cunha, M;
Publication
Engineering Proceedings
Abstract
The potential of hyperspectral UV–VIS–NIR reflectance for the in-field, non-destructive discrimination of bacterial canker on kiwi leaves caused by Pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae (Psa) was analyzed. Spectral data (325–1075 nm) of twenty kiwi plants were obtained in vivo and in situ with a handheld spectroradiometer in two commercial kiwi orchards in northern Portugal over 15 weeks, resulting in 504 spectral measurements. The suitability of different vegetation indexes (VIs) and applied predictive models (based on supervised machine learning algorithms) for classifying non-symptomatic and symptomatic kiwi leaves was evaluated. Eight distinct types of VIs were identified as relevant for disease diagnosis, highlighting the relevance of the Green, Red, Red-Edge, and NIR spectral features. The class prediction was achieved with good model metrics, achieving an accuracy of 0.71, kappa of 0.42, sensitivity of 0.67, specificity of 0.75, and F1 of 0.67. Thus, the present findings demonstrated the potential of hyperspectral UV–VIS–NIR reflectance for the non-destructive discrimination of bacterial canker on kiwi leaves. © 2023 by the authors.
2023
Authors
Silva, FM; Queirós, C; Pinho, T; Boaventura, J; Santos, F; Barroso, TG; Pereira, MR; Cunha, M; Martins, RC;
Publication
SENSORS AND ACTUATORS B-CHEMICAL
Abstract
Nutrient quantification in hydroponic systems is essential. Reagent-less spectral quantification of nitrogen, phosphate and potassium faces challenges in accessing information-rich spectral signals and unscrambling interference from each constituent. Herein, we introduce information equivalence between spectra and sample composition, enabling extraction of consistent covariance to isolate nutrient-specific spectral information (N, P or K) in Hoagland nutrient solutions using orthogonal covariance modes. Chemometrics methods quantify nitrogen and potassium, but not phosphate. Orthogonal covariance modes, however, enable quantification of all three nutrients: nitrogen (N) with R = 0.9926 and standard error of 17.22 ppm, phosphate (P) with R = 0.9196 and standard error of 63.62 ppm, and potassium (K) with R = 0.9975 and standard error of 9.51 ppm. Including pH information significantly improves phosphate quantification (R = 0.9638, standard error: 43.16 ppm). Results demonstrate a direct relationship between spectra and Hoagland nutrient solution information, preserving NPK orthogonality and supporting orthogonal covariance modes. These modes enhance detection sensitivity by maximizing information of the constituent being quantified, while minimizing interferences from others. Orthogonal covariance modes predicted nitrogen (R = 0.9474, standard error: 29.95 ppm) accurately. Phosphate and potassium showed strong interference from contaminants, but most extrapolation samples were correctly diagnosed above the reference interval (83.26%). Despite potassium features outside the knowledge base, a significant correlation was obtained (R = 0.6751). Orthogonal covariance modes use unique N, P or K information for quantification, not spurious correlations due to fertilizer composition. This approach minimizes interferences during extrapolation to complex samples, a crucial step towards resilient nutrient management in hydroponics using spectroscopy.
2008
Authors
Martins, RC; Lopes, VV; Vicente, AA; Teixeira, JA;
Publication
FOOD AND BIOPROCESS TECHNOLOGY
Abstract
Shelf-life is defined as the time that a product is acceptable and meets the consumers expectations regarding food quality. It is the result of the conjunction of all services in production, distribution, and consumption. Shelf-life dating is one of the most difficult tasks in food engineering. Market pressure has lead to the implementation of shelf-life by sensory analyses, which may not reflect the full quality spectra. Moreover, traditional methods for shelf-life dating and small-scale distribution chain tests cannot reproduce in a laboratory the real conditions of storage, distribution, and consumption on food quality. Today, food engineers are facing the challenges to monitor, diagnose, and control the quality and safety of food products. The advent of nanotechnology, multivariate sensors, information systems, and complex systems will revolutionize the way we manage, distribute, and consume foods. The informed consumer demands foods, under the legal standards, at low cost, high standards of nutritional, sensory, and health benefits. To accommodate the new paradigms, we herein present a critical review of shelf-life dating approaches with special emphasis in computational systems and future trends on complex systems methodologies applied to the prediction of food quality and safety.
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