R. Nortvedt et al., APPLICATION OF NEAR-INFRARED TRANSMITTANCE SPECTROSCOPY IN THE DETERMINATION OF FAT, PROTEIN AND DRY-MATTER IN ATLANTIC HALIBUT FILLET, Chemometrics and intelligent laboratory systems, 42(1-2), 1998, pp. 199-207
Near infrared transmittance (NIT) spectroscopy (850-1048 nm) has been
applied to the measurement of fat, protein and dry matter in wet homog
enized Atlantic halibut (Hippoglossus hippoglossus) fillet. A total of
155 fillet cuts (five sample sites) were selected from the start of t
he investigation (survey I) and 98 fillet cuts tone sample site) were
also selected from eight fish groups six months later (survey II). The
fish groups originated from a slaughtering quality experiment, where
fish size and fat content in the feed had been varied. The multivariat
e calibration models were tested separately for each survey and after
mixing the survey samples. The models were also tested after inclusion
of sample temperature or fish weight, or after reduction to spectra o
f eight wavelengths. The selected fillet cuts from survey LI gave cali
bration models with the best prediction abilities for fat and dry matt
er, whereas the combination of samples from both surveys gave the best
prediction abilities for protein. The constituent ranges (w.w.) were:
10-123 g/kg fat, 165-274 g/kg protein and 234-335 g/kg dry matter. Th
e partial least squares regression resulted in the following predictio
n errors, expressed as root-mean-square error of cross validation: 2.7
g/kg fat, 5.2 g/kg protein and 4.2 g/kg dry matter. The temperature a
djustment had positive influence on the test set validation of protein
and dry matter, whereas the fish-weight adjustment had positive influ
ence on the test set validation of fat. Calibration models based on ei
ght wavelengths were not optimal, but showed promising results, applic
able in a simpler instrument for future online quality monitoring of A
tlantic halibut fillet. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights rese
rved.