Abstract

The research contributes a unique method to achieve high-precision quantification of zearalenone (ZEN) in wheat, significantly improving accuracy in the analysis. Fourier transform near infrared spectroscopy (FT-NIR) was employed to capture the spectral information of wheat with different mildew degrees. Three feature selection models, competitive adaptive reweighted sampling (CARS), support vector machine-recursive feature elimination (SVM-RFE), and multiple feature-spaces ensemble-least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (MFE-LASSO) were introduced to processed pre-processed near-infrared spectral data and established partial least squares (PLS) regression according to the selected features. The outcomes indicated that the optimal generalization performance was achieved by the PLS model optimized through the MFE-LASSO model. The root mean square error of prediction (RMSEP) was 18.6442 μg·kg-1, coefficient of predictive determination (RP2) was 0.9545, and relative percent deviation (RPD) was 4.3198. According to the results, it is feasible to construct a stoichiometric model for the quantitative determination of ZEN in wheat by using FT-NIR combined with feature selection algorithm, and this method can also be extended to the detection of various molds in other cereals in the future.

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