Abstract

13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to classify olive oils from the three production areas of the Puglia region labeled with the "denomination of protected origin" (DPO) Terra di Bari, Colline di Brindisi, and Dauno. High resolution (13)C spectra of 173 olive oil samples were measured, and the intensity data of triacylglycerol resonances were processed by using linear discriminant analysis, which was carried out stepwise for variable selection. The olive oil samples from the DPOs Colline di Brindisi and Terra di Bari were 90% correctly classified, whereas only 74% of "Dauno" DPO oils were classified in the true group. The performance of the discriminant model was verified by applying the cross-validation procedure based on the "leave one out" formalism. The discriminant model was evaluated against a blind test set of olive oils from the three DPO areas. All the oils used for the purpose were correctly assigned to their respective groups, with the exception of the Dauno oil samples based on the Coratina cv. They were misclassified as Terra di Bari oils because of a common monovarietal composition.

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