Random forest as one-class classifier and infrared spectroscopy for food adulteration detection

Food Chem. 2019 Sep 30:293:323-332. doi: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2019.04.073. Epub 2019 Apr 27.

Abstract

This paper proposes the use of random forest for adulteration detection purposes, combining the random forest algorithm with the artificial generation of outliers from the authentic samples. This proposal was applied in two food adulteration studies: evening primrose oils using ATR-FTIR spectroscopy and ground nutmeg using NIR diffuse reflectance spectroscopy. The primrose oil was adulterated with soybean, corn and sunflower oils, and the model was validated using these adulterated oils and other different oils, such as rosehip and andiroba, in pure and adulterated forms. The ground nutmeg was adulterated with cumin, commercial monosodium glutamate, soil, roasted coffee husks and wood sawdust. For the primrose oil, the proposed method presented superior performance than PLS-DA and similar performance to SIMCA and for the ground nutmeg, the random forest was superior to PLS-DA and SIMCA. Also, in both applications using the random forest, no sample was excluded from the external validation set.

Keywords: Artificial outliers; Food adulteration; Infrared spectroscopy; One-class; Random forest.

MeSH terms

  • Corn Oil / analysis
  • Food Contamination / analysis*
  • Limit of Detection
  • Linoleic Acids / chemistry*
  • Myristica / chemistry
  • Oenothera biennis
  • Plant Oils / chemistry*
  • Soybean Oil / analysis
  • Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared / methods*
  • Sunflower Oil / analysis
  • gamma-Linolenic Acid / chemistry*

Substances

  • Linoleic Acids
  • Plant Oils
  • Sunflower Oil
  • evening primrose oil
  • gamma-Linolenic Acid
  • Soybean Oil
  • Corn Oil