Abstract

X-ray imaging is a widely used technique for non-destructive inspection of agricultural food products. One application of X-ray imaging is the autonomous, in-line detection of foreign objects in food samples. Examples of such inclusions are bone fragments in meat products, plastic and metal debris in fish, and fruit infestations. This article presents a processing methodology for unsupervised foreign object detection based on dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA). A novel thickness correction model is introduced as a pre-processing technique for DEXA data. The aim of the model is to homogenize regions in the image that belong to the food product and to enhance contrast where the foreign object is present. In this way, the segmentation of the foreign object is more robust to noise and lack of contrast. The proposed methodology was applied to a dataset of 488 samples of meat products acquired from a conveyor belt. Approximately 60% of the samples contain foreign objects of different types and sizes, while the rest of the samples are void of foreign objects. The results show that samples without foreign objects are correctly identified in 97% of cases and that the overall accuracy of foreign object detection reaches 95%.

Highlights

  • Agricultural food products naturally vary in detail regarding their internal structure.Individual samples can be analyzed to assess product quality, to predict maturity state, and to minimize waste

  • One of the important applications of X-rays is the automatic detection of foreign object inclusions that might appear in food products

  • The thickness correction procedure was tested on the scans of chicken fillets on a conveyor belt

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Summary

Introduction

Agricultural food products naturally vary in detail regarding their internal structure.Individual samples can be analyzed to assess product quality, to predict maturity state, and to minimize waste. To facilitate early detection of health risks, it is crucial to apply a procedure to inspect the capability to detect foreign object inclusions [1,2,3] and contaminations [4,5]. This task can be performed by a human expert for an individual sample. It is commonly applied to food samples while they are processed on a conveyor belt on the factory floor. One of the important applications of X-rays is the automatic detection of foreign object inclusions that might appear in food products

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