Line-scan hyperspectral imaging system for real-time inspection of poultry carcasses with fecal material and ingesta

► A multispectral imaging system is developed for fecal detection on poultry. ► A line-scan hyperspectral imager is configured to acquire three wavelengths. ► The system processes up to 286 Hz of spectral data. ► Up to 98% of detection accuracy is obtained by a test with poultry carcasses. ► The ima...

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Published inComputers and electronics in agriculture Vol. 79; no. 2; pp. 159 - 168
Main Authors Yoon, Seung Chul, Park, Bosoon, Lawrence, Kurt C., Windham, William R., Heitschmidt, Gerald W.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Amsterdam Elsevier B.V 01.11.2011
Elsevier
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Summary:► A multispectral imaging system is developed for fecal detection on poultry. ► A line-scan hyperspectral imager is configured to acquire three wavelengths. ► The system processes up to 286 Hz of spectral data. ► Up to 98% of detection accuracy is obtained by a test with poultry carcasses. ► The imaging system is viable for poultry inspection in poultry processing plants. In poultry processing plants, fecal material and ingesta are the primary source of carcass contamination with microbial pathogens. The current practice of the poultry inspection in the United States is primarily human visual observations. Since the visual inspection is becoming more challenging in poultry processing plants adopting high-speed lines, a rapid sorting system could significantly improve the detection and monitoring of carcasses with surface fecal material and ingesta. As a result, we developed a prototype line-scan hyperspectral imaging system configured as a real-time multispectral imaging subsystem for online detection of surface fecal material and ingesta. Specifically, we integrated a commercially available off-the-shelf hyperspectral image camera into the system with two line lights and a custom software program for real-time multispectral imaging. The bottleneck of the imaging system was the data acquisition. For that reason, a multithreaded software architecture was designed and implemented not only to meet the application requirements such as speed and detection accuracy, but also to be customizable to different imaging applications such as systemic disease detection in the future. The image acquisition and processing speed tests confirmed the system could operate to scan poultry carcasses in commercial poultry processing plants. The fecal detection algorithm was based on the previous research using different hyperspectral imaging systems. A new carcass detection and image formation algorithm was developed to allow existing image processing and detection algorithms reusable without any modifications. Sixteen chicken carcasses and four different types of fecal and ingesta samples were used in a study to test the imaging system at two different speeds (140 birds per minute and 180 birds per minute) in a pilot-scale poultry processing facility. The study found that the system could grab and process three waveband images of carcasses moving up to 180 birds per minute (a line-scan rate 286 Hz) and detect fecal material and ingesta on their surfaces. The detection accuracy of the system varied between 89% and 98% with minimum false positive errors (less than 1%), depending on tested detection algorithms. Therefore, these findings provide the basis of not only a commercially viable imaging platform for fecal detection but also a single poultry inspection system for multiple tasks such as systemic disease detection and quality sorting.
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ISSN:0168-1699
1872-7107
DOI:10.1016/j.compag.2011.09.008