Fraud detection and quality assessment of olive oil using ultrasound

Food Sci Nutr. 2020 Nov 4;9(1):180-189. doi: 10.1002/fsn3.1980. eCollection 2021 Jan.

Abstract

Today, food safety is recognized as one of the most important human priorities, so effective and new policies have been implemented to improve and develop the position of effective laws in the food industry. Extra virgin olive oil (EVOO) has many amazing benefits for human body's health. Due to the nutritional value and high price of EVOO, there is a lot of cheating in it. The ultrasound approach has many advantages in the food studies, and it is fast and nondestructive for quality evaluation. In this study, to fraud detection of EVOO four ultrasonic properties of oil in five levels of adulteration (5%, 10%, 20%, 35%, and 50%) were extracted. The 2 MHz ultrasonic probes were used in the DOI 1,000 STARMANS diagnostic ultrasonic device in a "probe holding mechanism." The four extracted ultrasonic features include the following: "percentage of amplitude reduction, time of flight (TOF), the difference between the first and second maximum amplitudes of the domain (in the time-amplitude diagram), and the ratio of the first and second maximum of amplitude." Seven classification algorithms including "Naïve Bayes, support vector machine, gradient boosting classifier, K-nearest neighbors, artificial neural network, logistic regression, and AdaBoost" were used to classify the preprocessed data. Results showed that the Naïve Bayes algorithm with 90.2% provided the highest accuracy among the others, and the support vector machine and gradient boosting classifier with 88.2% were in the next ranks.

Keywords: adulteration; nondestructive; olive oil; quality; ultrasound.