Abstract

Herbal-based products are becoming a widespread production trend among manufacturers for the domestic and international markets. As the production increases to meet the market demand, it is very crucial for the manufacturer to ensure that their products have met specific criteria and fulfil the intended quality determined by the quality controller. One famous herbal-based product is herbal tea. This paper investigates bio-inspired flavour assessments in a data fusion framework involving an e-nose and e-tongue. The objectives are to attain good classification of different types and brands of herbal tea, classification of different flavour masking effects and finally classification of different concentrations of herbal tea. Two data fusion levels were employed in this research, low level data fusion and intermediate level data fusion. Four classification approaches; LDA, SVM, KNN and PNN were examined in search of the best classifier to achieve the research objectives. In order to evaluate the classifiers' performance, an error estimator based on k-fold cross validation and leave-one-out were applied. Classification based on GC-MS TIC data was also included as a comparison to the classification performance using fusion approaches. Generally, KNN outperformed the other classification techniques for the three flavour assessments in the low level data fusion and intermediate level data fusion. However, the classification results based on GC-MS TIC data are varied.

Highlights

  • The number of food and beverage industries is growing due to an increase in national and international demand

  • All discriminant functions are a linear combination of the features and it can be written in an equation such as Equation (1)

  • gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy (GC-mass spectrometry (MS)) TIC data, which cover the assessment of different types and brands, as well as different concentrations were fairly low, especially for the latter criteria

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Summary

Introduction

The number of food and beverage industries is growing due to an increase in national and international demand. Since herbal-based products are considered to have medicinal value [1], strict regulations are applied for such products to enter the market. By producing herbal-based product as foods, dietary supplements and health drinks which seems to be more beneficial, companies do not need to abide by these strict regulations anymore and the health claims on their labels are no longer an obligation of proof. One such example is the growing demand for herbal teas such as java tea made from Orthosiphon stamineus (O. stamineus) that is becoming more favourable among customers

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