Meat and Fish Freshness Assessment by a Portable and Simplified Electronic Nose System (Mastersense)

Sensors (Basel). 2019 Jul 22;19(14):3225. doi: 10.3390/s19143225.

Abstract

The evaluation of meat and fish quality is crucial to ensure that products are safe and meet the consumers' expectation. The present work aims at developing a new low-cost, portable, and simplified electronic nose system, named Mastersense, to assess meat and fish freshness. Four metal oxide semiconductor sensors were selected by principal component analysis and were inserted in an "ad hoc" designed measuring chamber. The Mastersense system was used to test beef and poultry slices, and plaice and salmon fillets during their shelf life at 4 °C, from the day of packaging and beyond the expiration date. The same samples were tested for Total Viable Count, and the microbial results were used to define freshness classes to develop classification models by the K-Nearest Neighbours' algorithm and Partial Least Square-Discriminant Analysis. All the obtained models gave global sensitivity and specificity with prediction higher than 83.3% and 84.0%, respectively. Moreover, a McNemar's test was performed to compare the prediction ability of the two classification algorithms, which resulted in comparable values (p > 0.05). Thus, the Mastersense prototype implemented with the K-Nearest Neighbours' model is considered the most convenient strategy to assess meat and fish freshness.

Keywords: K-Nearest Neighbours’ algorithm (K-NN), Partial Least Square-Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA); MOS sensors; electronic nose; food quality.

MeSH terms

  • Algorithms*
  • Animals
  • Cattle
  • Electronic Nose*
  • Equipment Design
  • Fish Products / analysis*
  • Food Analysis / instrumentation*
  • Food Analysis / methods
  • Food Microbiology
  • Food Quality
  • Least-Squares Analysis
  • Meat / analysis*
  • Models, Theoretical
  • Principal Component Analysis
  • Salmon