Assessment of Beer Quality Based on a Robotic Pourer, Computer Vision, and Machine Learning Algorithms Using Commercial Beers.

Journal: Journal of food science
Published Date:

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Sensory attributes of beer are directly linked to perceived foam-related parameters and beer color. The aim of this study was to develop an objective predictive model using machine learning modeling to assess the intensity levels of sensory descriptors in beer using the physical measurements of color and foam-related parameters. A robotic pourer (RoboBEER), was used to obtain 15 color and foam-related parameters from 22 different commercial beer samples. A sensory session using quantitative descriptive analysis (QDA ) with trained panelists was conducted to assess the intensity of 10 beer descriptors. Results showed that the principal component analysis explained 64% of data variability with correlations found between foam-related descriptors from sensory and RoboBEER such as the positive and significant correlation between carbon dioxide and carbonation mouthfeel (R = 0.62), correlation of viscosity to sensory, and maximum volume of foam and total lifetime of foam (R = 0.75, R = 0.77, respectively). Using the RoboBEER parameters as inputs, an artificial neural network (ANN) regression model showed high correlation (R = 0.91) to predict the intensity levels of 10 related sensory descriptors such as yeast, grains and hops aromas, hops flavor, bitter, sour and sweet tastes, viscosity, carbonation, and astringency.

Authors

  • Claudia Gonzalez Viejo
    University of Melbourne, School of Agriculture and Food, Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, Victoria, Australia.
  • Sigfredo Fuentes
    University of Melbourne, School of Agriculture and Food, Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, Victoria, Australia.
  • Damir D Torrico
    Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, School of Agriculture and Food, Univ. of Melbourne, VIC, 3010, Australia.
  • Kate Howell
    University of Melbourne, School of Agriculture and Food, Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, Victoria, Australia.
  • Frank R Dunshea
    University of Melbourne, School of Agriculture and Food, Faculty of Veterinary and Agricultural Sciences, Victoria, Australia.