141 research outputs found
The impact of chemometrics on food traceability
In the last decades, mankind has become totally aware about the importance of food quality: nowadays authentication and traceability are words of general use.
Food authentication verifies how much a food is in accordance with its label description and law and it could be considered a further guarantee for the quality and safety of a foodstuff.
The traceability of food could be considered an essential element in ensuring safety and high quality of food. The synergistic use of instrumental analytical techniques and chemometrics represents a promising way to obtain trustworthy results in the development of authenticity and traceability models. This chapter deals with the potentialities of chemometrics tools in resolving some real issues related to food traceability and authenticity. Particular attention will be paid to the use of some exploratory, classification and discrimination techniques.
In the first part of this chapter, a briefly description of European regulations (Authenticity and Traceability: the European Union point of view), and traceability and authenticity markers (Authenticity and Traceability: a scientific point of view) is reported. The second part is split into two sections: namely Food Authenticity and Food Traceability applications, where the main features and advantages of some chemometrics approaches are presented
Different Behavior of Enteric Bacteria and Viruses in Clay and Sandy Soils after Biofertilization with Swine Digestate
Enteric pathogens from biofertilizer can accumulate in the soil, subsequently
contaminating water and crops. We evaluated the survival, percolation and leaching
of model enteric pathogens in clay and sandy soils after biofertilization with
swine digestate: PhiX-174, mengovirus (vMC0), Salmonella enterica Typhimurium and
Escherichia coli O157:H7 were used as biomarkers. The survival of vMC0 and PhiX-174
in clay soil was significantly lower than in sandy soil (ıPT90 values of 10.520 0.600
vs. 21.270 1.100 and 12.040 0.010 vs. 43.470 1.300, respectively) and PhiX-
174 showed faster percolation and leaching in sandy soil than clay soil (ıPT90 values of
0.46 and 2.43, respectively). S. enterica Typhimurium was percolated and inactivated
more slowly than E. coli O157:H7 (ıPT90 values of 9.340 0.200 vs. 6.620 0.500
and 11.900 0.900 vs. 10.750 0.900 in clay and sandy soils, respectively), such
that E. coli O157:H7 was transferred more quickly to the deeper layers of both soils
evaluated (percolation). Our findings suggest that E. coli O157:H7 may serve as a useful
microbial biomarker of depth contamination and leaching in clay and sandy soil and that
bacteriophage could be used as an indicator of enteric pathogen persistence. Our study
contributes to development of predictive models for enteric pathogen behavior in soils,
and for potential water and food contamination associated with biofertilization, useful for
risk management and mitigation in swine digestate recycling.RTA2014-00024-C04-01 from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Innovation
and the Brazilian CNPq Project number 472804/2013-8, an dby CAPES/PNPD and CAPES/PDSE
Formation of Zn- and Fe-sulfides near hydrothermal vents at the Eastern Lau Spreading Center: implications for sulfide bioavailability to chemoautotrophs
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licens
Preparation and evaluation of sufficiently homogeneous and stable reference materials for priority hazardous substances in whole water
Monogenic diabetes syndromes:Locus-specific databases for Alström, Wolfram, and Thiamine-responsive megaloblastic anemia
We developed a variant database for diabetes syndrome genes, using the Leiden Open Variation Database platform, containing observed phenotypes matched to the genetic variations. We populated it with 628 published disease-associated variants (December 2016) for: WFS1 (n = 309), CISD2 (n = 3), ALMS1 (n = 268), and SLC19A2 (n = 48) for Wolfram type 1, Wolfram type 2, Alström, and Thiamine-responsive megaloblastic anemia syndromes, respectively; and included 23 previously unpublished novel germline variants in WFS1 and 17 variants in ALMS1. We then investigated genotype–phenotype relations for the WFS1 gene. The presence of biallelic loss-of-function variants predicted Wolfram syndrome defined by insulin-dependent diabetes and optic atrophy, with a sensitivity of 79% (95% CI 75%–83%) and specificity of 92% (83%–97%). The presence of minor loss-of-function variants in WFS1 predicted isolated diabetes, isolated deafness, or isolated congenital cataracts without development of the full syndrome (sensitivity 100% [93%–100%]; specificity 78% [73%–82%]). The ability to provide a prognostic prediction based on genotype will lead to improvements in patient care and counseling. The development of the database as a repository for monogenic diabetes gene variants will allow prognostic predictions for other diabetes syndromes as next-generation sequencing expands the repertoire of genotypes and phenotypes. The database is publicly available online at https://lovd.euro-wabb.org
Joint optimisation of operation and maintenance policies in an urban ropeway transport systems context
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to propose a stochastic optimisation model for integrating service and maintenance policies in order to solve the queuing problem and the cost of maintenance activities for public transport services, with a particular focus on urban ropeway system. Design/methodology/approach: The authors adopt the following approaches: a discrete-event model that uses a set of interrelated queues for the formulation of the service problem using a cost-based expression; and a maintenance model consisting of preventive and corrective maintenance actions, which considers two different maintenance policies (periodic block-type and age-based). Findings: The work shows that neither periodic block-type maintenance nor an age-based maintenance is necessarily the best maintenance strategy over a long system lifecycle; the optimal strategy must consider both policies. Practical implications: The maintenance policies are then evaluated for their impact on the service and operation of the transport system. The authors conclude by applying the proposed optimisation model using an example concerning ropeway systems. Originality/value: This is the first study to simultaneously consider maintenance policy and operational policy in an urban aerial ropeway system, taking up the problem of queuing with particular attention to the unique requirements public transport services. © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited
Using Calibrations Developed for Fine Milled Meat and Bone Meal on Spectra Measured on Non-Milled Samples
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