EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing 
Volume 2008 (2008), Article ID 247643, 11 pages
doi:10.1155/2008/247643
Research Article

Classification of Hazelnut Kernels by Using Impact Acoustic Time-Frequency Patterns

Habil Kalkan,1 Nuri Firat Ince,2 Ahmed H. Tewfik,2 Yasemin Yardimci,1 and Tom Pearson3

1Informatics Institute, Middle East Technical University, Ankara 06531, Turkey
2Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Minnesota, 55455, MN, USA
3Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, 66502, KS, USA

Received 17 January 2007; Revised 7 July 2007; Accepted 8 October 2007

Recommended by Hugo Van hamme

Abstract

Hazelnuts with damaged or cracked shells are more prone to infection with aflatoxin producing molds (Aspergillus flavus). These molds can cause cancer. In this study, we introduce a new approach that separates damaged/cracked hazelnut kernels from good ones by using time-frequency features obtained from impact acoustic signals. The proposed technique requires no prior knowledge of the relevant time and frequency locations. In an offline step, the algorithm adaptively segments impact signals from a training data set in time using local cosine packet analysis and a Kullback-Leibler criterion to assess the discrimination power of different segmentations. In each resulting time segment, the signal is further decomposed into subbands using an undecimated wavelet transform. The most discriminative subbands are selected according to the Euclidean distance between the cumulative probability distributions of the corresponding subband coefficients. The most discriminative subbands are fed into a linear discriminant analysis classifier. In the online classification step, the algorithm simply computes the learned features from the observed signal and feeds them to the linear discriminant analysis (LDA) classifier. The algorithm achieved a throughput rate of 45 nuts/s and a classification accuracy of 96% with the 30 most discriminative features, a higher rate than those provided with prior methods.