scholarly journals Development of Artificial Neural Network Models to Assess Beer Acceptability Based on Sensory Properties Using a Robotic Pourer: A Comparative Model Approach to Achieve an Artificial Intelligence System

Beverages ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudia Gonzalez Viejo ◽  
Damir D. Torrico ◽  
Frank R. Dunshea ◽  
Sigfredo Fuentes

Artificial neural networks (ANN) have become popular for optimization and prediction of parameters in foods, beverages, agriculture and medicine. For brewing, they have been explored to develop rapid methods to assess product quality and acceptability. Different beers (N = 17) were analyzed in triplicates using a robotic pourer, RoboBEER (University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia), to assess 15 color and foam-related parameters using computer-vision. Those samples were tested using sensory analysis for acceptability of carbonation mouthfeel, bitterness, flavor and overall liking with 30 consumers using a 9-point hedonic scale. ANN models were developed using 17 different training algorithms with 15 color and foam-related parameters as inputs and liking of four descriptors obtained from consumers as targets. Each algorithm was tested using five, seven and ten neurons and compared to select the best model based on correlation coefficients, slope and performance (mean squared error (MSE). Bayesian Regularization algorithm with seven neurons presented the best correlation (R = 0.98) and highest performance (MSE = 0.03) with no overfitting. These models may be used as a cost-effective method for fast-screening of beers during processing to assess acceptability more efficiently. The use of RoboBEER, computer-vision algorithms and ANN will allow the implementation of an artificial intelligence system for the brewing industry to assess its effectiveness.

2012 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 2-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Selcuk Nogay ◽  
Tahir Cetin Akinci ◽  
Marija Eidukeviciute

Artificial neural network models were used for short term wind speed forecasting in the Mardin area, located in the Southeast Anatolia region of Turkey. Using data that was obtained from the State Meteorological Service and that encompassed a ten year period, short term wind speed forecasting for the Mardin area was performed. A number of different ANN models were developed in this study. The model with 60 neurons is the most successful model for short term wind speed forecasting. The mean squared error and approximation values for training of this model were 0.378088 and 0.970490, respectively. The ANN models developed in the study have produced satisfactory results. The most successful among those models constitutes a model that can be used by the Mardin Electric Utility Control Centre.


Author(s):  
zhoujing zhang ◽  
di xu ◽  
Ozioma Akakuru ◽  
wenjing xu ◽  
yewei zhang

The diagnosis of papillary thyroid carcinoma has always been a concerned and challenging issue and it is very important and meaningful to have a definite diagnosis before the operation. In this study, we tried to use an artificial intelligence algorithm instead of medical statistics to analyze the genetic fingerprint from gene chip results to identify papillary thyroid carcinoma. We trained 20 artificial neural network models with differential genes and other important genes related to the cell metabolic cycle as the list of input features, and apply them to the diagnosis of papillary thyroid cancer in the independent validation data set. The results showed that when we used the DEGs and all genes lists as input features the models got the best diagnostic performance with AUC=98.97% and 99.37% and the accuracy were both 96%. This study revealed that the proposed artificial neural network models constructed with genetic fingerprints could achieve a prediction of papillary thyroid carcinoma. Such models can support clinicians to make more accurate clinical diagnoses. At the same time, it provides a novel idea for the application of artificial intelligence in clinical medicine.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 514-522
Author(s):  
D. V. Bakhteev

The modern capabilities of computers have returned interest in artificial intelligence technologies. A particular area of application of these technologies is pattern recognition, which can be applied to the traditional forensic task – identification of signs of forgery (imitation) of a signature. The results of forgery are differentiated into three types: auto-forgery, simple and skilled forgeries. Only skilled forgeries are considered in this study. The online and offline approaches to the study of signatures and other handwriting material are described. The developed artificial intelligence system based on an artificial neural network refers to the offline type of signature recognition – that is, it is focused on working exclusively with the consequences of the signature – its graphic image. The content and principles of the formation of a hypothesis for the development of an artificial intelligence system are described with a combination of humanitarian (legal) knowledge and natural-technical knowledge. At the initial stage of the study, in order to develop an experimental-applied artificial intelligence system based on an artificial neural network focused on identifying forged signatures, 127 people were questioned in order to identify a person's ability to detect fake signatures. It was found that under experimental conditions the probability of a correct determination of the originality or forgery of the presented signature for the respondent is on average 69.29 %. Accordingly, this value can be used as a threshold for determining the effectiveness of the developed artificial intelligence system. In the process of preparing the dataset (an array for training and verification of its results) of the system in terms of fraudulent signatures, some forensically significant features were revealed, associated with the psychological and anatomical features of the person performing the forgery, both known to criminalistics and new ones. It is emphasized that the joint development of artificial intelligence systems by the methods of computer science and criminalistics can generate additional results that may be useful outside the scope of the research tasks.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Abubakar Siddique

<p><b>Artificial intelligence systems have become proficient at linking environmental features to targets to describe simple patterns in data. However, these systems can struggle with many real-world problems that entail hierarchical patterns within patterns, for example, in recognizing object ontologies where one object is made-up of other objects. Although it is possible to capture such complex structures by utilizing state-of-the-art deep networks, the knowledge is often stored in layers that do not take advantage of the potential benefits provided by reusing patterns within a layer of the system.</b></p> <p>Biological nervous systems can learn knowledge from simple and small-scale problems and then apply it to resolve more complex and large-scale problems in similar and related domains. However, rudimentary attempts to apply this transfer learning in artificial intelligence systems have struggled. This may be due to the homogeneous nature of their knowledge representation. The current understanding of the learning mechanisms in the brains of human and non-human animals can be used as inspiration to improve learning in artificial agents. Research into lateral asymmetry of the brain shows that it enables modular learning at different levels of abstraction that facilitate transfer between tasks.</p> <p>The proposed thesis is that an artificial intelligence system that enables lateralization and modular learning at different levels of abstraction has the ability to solve complex hierarchical problems that a similar homogeneous system can not. The comprehensive goal of this thesis is to accomplish lateralized learning, inspired by the principles of biological intelligence, in artificial intelligence systems. The objectives are to show that lateralization and modular learning assist the novel systems to encapsulate the underlying knowledge patterns in the form of building blocks of knowledge. These building blocks of knowledge are to be tested on analyzable Boolean tasks as well as practical computer vision and navigation tasks. Academic contributions are related to the novel methods of the linking, transfer, and sharing of learned knowledge which are based on the analogous strategies of the brain.</p> <p>This thesis proposes a general framework for lateralized artificial intelligence systems. The novel lateralized framework spans key aspects of knowledge perception, knowledge representation and utilization, and patterns of connectivity. It determines the essential functionality, critical methods, and associated parameters that are required to be incorporated into an artificial intelligence system to behave as a lateralized artificial intelligence system.</p> <p>This thesis creates a novel evolutionary machine learning system, by adapting the lateralized framework, to obtain a proof-of-concept of the lateralized approach. Considering the same problem at different levels of abstraction enables the novel system to reframe a complex problem as a simple problem and efficiently resolve it. The results on analyzable Boolean tasks show that the problems that contain a natural hierarchy of patterns are solved to a scale that exceeds previous work (i.e. 18-bit hierarchical multiplexer problem), and reusing learned general patterns as constituents for future problems advances transfer learning (e.g. n-bit parity problem effectively becomes a sequence of 2-bit parity problems). </p> <p>This thesis creates a novel lateralized artificial intelligence system, by adapting the lateralized framework, that shows robustness in a real-world domain that includes uncertainty, noise, and irrelevant and redundant data. The results of image classification tasks show that the lateralized system efficiently learns hierarchical distributions of knowledge, demonstrating performance that is similar to (or better than) other state-of-the-art deep systems as it reasons using multiple representations. Crucially, the novel system outperformed all the state-of-the-art deep models for the classification (binary classes) of normal and adversarial images by 0.43%-2.56% and 2.15%-25.84%, respectively. This thesis creates another novel multi-class lateralized system for computer vision problems to show that the lateralized approach can be scaled and not limited to learning classifier systems.</p> <p>Both the Boolean and computer vision problems are single step problems in the spatial domain. However, most biological tasks, which exhibit heterogeneity, are temporal in nature. This thesis creates a novel frame-of-reference based artificial intelligence system, by adapting the lateralized framework, to address perceptual aliasing in multi-step decision making tasks. Considering aliased states at a constituent level enables the novel system to place them appropriately in holistic level policies. Consequently, the novel system transforms a non-Markov environment into a deterministic environment and efficiently resolves it. Experimental results show that the novel system effectively solves complex aliasing patterns in non-Markov environments that have been challenging to artificial agents. For example, the novel system utilizes only 6.5, 3.71, and 3.22 steps to resolve Maze10, Littman57, and Woods102, respectively.</p> <p>A final contribution of this work is to obtain evidence of the benefits/costs of lateralization from artificial intelligence in order to inform cognitive neuroscience. Given that lateralization is ubiquitous in brains, evolutionary benefits can be assumed, at least in some domains. But that does not mean those benefits extend to all domains. The cognitive neuroscience research community has been struggling to determine the trade-off between the benefits and costs of lateralization. It has been hypothesized that lateralization has benefits that may counterbalance its costs. Lateralization has been associated with both poor and good performance. This thesis demonstrates the value of viable artificial systems for testing the costs and benefits of lateralization in biological systems.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 69 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 355-364
Author(s):  
Souad Belmadani ◽  
Mabrouk Hamadache ◽  
Cherif Si-Moussa ◽  
Maamar Laidi ◽  
Salah Hanini

In the present article, two models based on the artificial neural network methodology (ANN) have been optimised to predict the density (ρ) and kinematic viscosity (μ) of different systems of biofuels and their blends with diesel fuel. An experimental database of 1025 points, including 34 systems (15 pure systems, 14 binary systems, and 5 ternary systems) was used for the development of these models. These models use six inputs, which are temperature (T) in the range of −10 – 200 °C, volume fractions (X1, X2, X3) in the range of 0–1, and to distinguish these systems, we used kinematic viscosity at 20 °C in the range of 0.67–74.19 mm2 s–1 and density at 20 °C in the range of 0.7560–0.9188 g cm–3. The best results were obtained with the architecture of {6-26-2: 6 neurons in the input layer – 26 neurons in the hidden layer – 2 neurons in the output layer}. Results of comparison between experimental and simulated values in terms of the correlation coefficients were: R2 = 0.9965 for density, and R2 = 0.9938 for kinematic viscosity. A 238 new database experimental of 4 systems (2 pure systems, 1 binary system, and 1 ternary system) was used to check the accuracy of the two ANN models previously developed. Results of prediction performances in terms of the correlation coefficients were: R2 = 0.9980 for density, and R2 = 0.9653 for kinematic viscosity. Comparison of validation results with those of the other studies shows that the neural network models gave far better results.


Author(s):  
N.A. Yanishevskaya ◽  
◽  
I.P. Bolodurina ◽  

In the Russian Federation, the agro-industrial complex is one of the leading sectors of the eco-nomy with a volume of domestic product of 4.5%. Russia owns 10 % of all arable land in the world. According to the data on the sown areas by crops in 2020, most of the agricultural area of Russia is occupied by wheat. The Russian Federation ranks third in the ranking of leading countries in the production of this type of grain crops, as well as leading positions in its export. Brown (leaf) and linear (stem) rust is the most harmful disease of grain crops. It is the reason for the sparseness of wheat crops and leads to a sharp decrease in yield. Therefore, one of the main tasks of farmers is to preserve the crop from diseases. The application of such areas of artificial intelligence as computer vision, machine learning and deep learning is able to cope with this task. These artificial intelligence technologies allow us to successfully solve applied problems of the agro-industrial complex using automated analysis of photographic materials. Aim. To consider the application of computer vision methods for the problem of classification of lesions of cultivated plants on the example of wheat. Materials and methods. The CGIAR Computer Vision for Crop Disease dataset for the crop disease recognition task is taken from the open source Kaggle. It is proposed to use an approach to the re-cognition of lesions of cultivated plants using the well-known neural network models ResNet50, DenseNet169, VGG16 and EfficientNet-B0. Neural network models receive images of wheat as in-put. The output of neural networks is the class of plant damage. To overcome the effect of overfit-ting neural networks, various regularization techniques are investigated. Results. The results of the classification quality, estimated by the software using the F1-score metric, which is the average harmonic between the Precision and Recall measures, are presented. Conclusion. As a result of the conducted research, it was found that the DenseNet model showed the best recognition accuracy us-ing a combination of transfer learning technology and DropOut and L2 regulation technologies to overcome the effect of retraining. The use of this approach allowed us to achieve a recognition ac-curacy of 91%.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Abubakar Siddique

<p><b>Artificial intelligence systems have become proficient at linking environmental features to targets to describe simple patterns in data. However, these systems can struggle with many real-world problems that entail hierarchical patterns within patterns, for example, in recognizing object ontologies where one object is made-up of other objects. Although it is possible to capture such complex structures by utilizing state-of-the-art deep networks, the knowledge is often stored in layers that do not take advantage of the potential benefits provided by reusing patterns within a layer of the system.</b></p> <p>Biological nervous systems can learn knowledge from simple and small-scale problems and then apply it to resolve more complex and large-scale problems in similar and related domains. However, rudimentary attempts to apply this transfer learning in artificial intelligence systems have struggled. This may be due to the homogeneous nature of their knowledge representation. The current understanding of the learning mechanisms in the brains of human and non-human animals can be used as inspiration to improve learning in artificial agents. Research into lateral asymmetry of the brain shows that it enables modular learning at different levels of abstraction that facilitate transfer between tasks.</p> <p>The proposed thesis is that an artificial intelligence system that enables lateralization and modular learning at different levels of abstraction has the ability to solve complex hierarchical problems that a similar homogeneous system can not. The comprehensive goal of this thesis is to accomplish lateralized learning, inspired by the principles of biological intelligence, in artificial intelligence systems. The objectives are to show that lateralization and modular learning assist the novel systems to encapsulate the underlying knowledge patterns in the form of building blocks of knowledge. These building blocks of knowledge are to be tested on analyzable Boolean tasks as well as practical computer vision and navigation tasks. Academic contributions are related to the novel methods of the linking, transfer, and sharing of learned knowledge which are based on the analogous strategies of the brain.</p> <p>This thesis proposes a general framework for lateralized artificial intelligence systems. The novel lateralized framework spans key aspects of knowledge perception, knowledge representation and utilization, and patterns of connectivity. It determines the essential functionality, critical methods, and associated parameters that are required to be incorporated into an artificial intelligence system to behave as a lateralized artificial intelligence system.</p> <p>This thesis creates a novel evolutionary machine learning system, by adapting the lateralized framework, to obtain a proof-of-concept of the lateralized approach. Considering the same problem at different levels of abstraction enables the novel system to reframe a complex problem as a simple problem and efficiently resolve it. The results on analyzable Boolean tasks show that the problems that contain a natural hierarchy of patterns are solved to a scale that exceeds previous work (i.e. 18-bit hierarchical multiplexer problem), and reusing learned general patterns as constituents for future problems advances transfer learning (e.g. n-bit parity problem effectively becomes a sequence of 2-bit parity problems). </p> <p>This thesis creates a novel lateralized artificial intelligence system, by adapting the lateralized framework, that shows robustness in a real-world domain that includes uncertainty, noise, and irrelevant and redundant data. The results of image classification tasks show that the lateralized system efficiently learns hierarchical distributions of knowledge, demonstrating performance that is similar to (or better than) other state-of-the-art deep systems as it reasons using multiple representations. Crucially, the novel system outperformed all the state-of-the-art deep models for the classification (binary classes) of normal and adversarial images by 0.43%-2.56% and 2.15%-25.84%, respectively. This thesis creates another novel multi-class lateralized system for computer vision problems to show that the lateralized approach can be scaled and not limited to learning classifier systems.</p> <p>Both the Boolean and computer vision problems are single step problems in the spatial domain. However, most biological tasks, which exhibit heterogeneity, are temporal in nature. This thesis creates a novel frame-of-reference based artificial intelligence system, by adapting the lateralized framework, to address perceptual aliasing in multi-step decision making tasks. Considering aliased states at a constituent level enables the novel system to place them appropriately in holistic level policies. Consequently, the novel system transforms a non-Markov environment into a deterministic environment and efficiently resolves it. Experimental results show that the novel system effectively solves complex aliasing patterns in non-Markov environments that have been challenging to artificial agents. For example, the novel system utilizes only 6.5, 3.71, and 3.22 steps to resolve Maze10, Littman57, and Woods102, respectively.</p> <p>A final contribution of this work is to obtain evidence of the benefits/costs of lateralization from artificial intelligence in order to inform cognitive neuroscience. Given that lateralization is ubiquitous in brains, evolutionary benefits can be assumed, at least in some domains. But that does not mean those benefits extend to all domains. The cognitive neuroscience research community has been struggling to determine the trade-off between the benefits and costs of lateralization. It has been hypothesized that lateralization has benefits that may counterbalance its costs. Lateralization has been associated with both poor and good performance. This thesis demonstrates the value of viable artificial systems for testing the costs and benefits of lateralization in biological systems.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (65) ◽  
pp. 67-85
Author(s):  
Leonardo Luís Röpke ◽  
Manuel Osório Binelo

This work presents the study and development of an Artificial Intelligence system, with focus on K-means algorithms and Artificial Neural Networks, to assist fleet managers in the identification of routes and route deviations. The developed tool has the objective of modernizing the process of identification of routes and deviations of routes. The results show that the Artificial Neural Networks obtained a 100% accuracy rate in the identification of routes, and in the identification of route deviations the RNAs were able to identify 61% of the routes presented. Therefore, RNAs are an excellent technique to be applied to the identification of routes and deviations of routes. The K-means algorithm presented good results when applied in the discovery of similar routes, thus becoming an important tool applied to the work of monitoring vehicles routes.


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