Executives ... FYI.Portable inspection devices that determine food safety and quality are under development. For instance, researchers have succeeded with developing high-speed optical technology that inspects wheat and other grains, detecting protein content as well as mold mold, name for certain multicellular organisms of the various classes of the kingdom Fungi, characteristically having bodies composed of a cottony mycelium. The colors of molds are caused by the spores, which are borne on the mycelium. . Others are using laser beams to judge taste, firmness and other quality aspects of fresh produce. Investigators are focusing their attention on apples, developing a system that could be used for other fresh produce as well. It can detect contaminants on the apple surface, such as fecal fecal /fe·cal/ (fe´k'l) pertaining to or of the nature of feces. fe·cal adj. Relating to or composed of feces. fecal pertaining to or of the nature of feces. matter. Because these systems use optically filtered light and optoelectronics See optoelectronic. to "see," they are called machine vision or optical sensing optical sensing, in general, any method by which information that occurs as variations in the intensity, or some other property, of light is translated into an electric signal. This is usually accomplished by the use of various photoelectric devices. systems. At the heart of these systems is a digital multispectral camera that can take photos at different wavelengths simultaneously and can even detect light invisible to the naked eye. The systems include the latest, fastest cameras of this type. All the systems rely on two or three wavelengths of light chosen to best see special features. Machine vision nicely supports human inspection because its instruments can image every single fruit, vegetable, grain kernel The nucleus of an operating system. It is the closest part to the machine level and may activate the hardware directly or interface to another software layer that drives the hardware. , or meat or poultry product that speeds along a processing line. It also gives inspectors an extra pair of eyes for scanning machinery and processing areas for contamination that is invisible to the naked eye. Contact: Yud-Ren Chen, USDA-ARS USDA-ARS United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service Instrumentation and Sensing Laboratory, Building 303, 10300 Baltimore Ave., Beltsville, MD 20705-2350. Phone: 301-504-8450. Fax: 301-504-9466. Email: cheny@ba.ars.usda.gov. |
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