Abstract

With the events of fake and inferior rice and food products occurring frequently, how to establish a rapid and high accuracy monitoring method for rice food identification becomes an urgent problem. In this work, we investigate using combined laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) and hyperspectral imaging (HSI) with machine learning algorithms to identify the place of origin of rice production. Six geographical origin rice samples grown in different parts of China are selected and pretreated, and measured by the atomic emission spectra of LIBS and the reflection spectra of HSI, respectively. The principal component analysis (PCA) is utilized to realize data dimensionality and extract the data feat of LIBS, HSI and fusion data, and based on this, three models employing the partial least squares discriminant analysis (PLS-DA), the support vector machine (SVM) and the extreme learning machine (ELM) are used to identify the rice geographical origin. The results show that the accuracy of LIBS and HSI analysis with the SVM machine learning algorithm can reach 93.06% and 88.07%, respectively, and the accuracy of combined LIBS and HSI data fusion recognition can reach 99.85%. Besides, the classification accuracy of the three models measured after pretreatment is basically all above 95%, and up to 99.85%. This study proves the effectiveness of using the combined LIBS and HSI with the machine learning algorithm in rice geographical origin identification, which can achieve rapid and accurate rice quality and identity detection.

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