Differentiation between fresh and frozen-thawed mackerel fish using low-cost portable near infrared spectrometry devices
Mar Giró-Candanedo, Jordi Cruz, Josep Comaposada, Clara Barnés-Calle, P. Gou, E. Fulladosa
Abstract
Mislabelling frozen-thawed fish fillets as fresh is one of the most important fraudulent practices during commercialisation. This study aimed to determine the ability of two portable miniaturised low-cost near-infrared spectroscopy (NIR) devices intended for consumers to discriminate between fresh and thawed mackerel (submitted to one or two frozen-thawed cycles) and between different freezing systems. The effect of different fish seasonal characteristics on the performance of the model was also evaluated. The low-cost NIR devices were able to discriminate between fresh and thawed samples with a classification rate of 90.3% and 94.1% and the freezing system to which they were submitted with a classification rate of 91.2% and 89.7%. These findings suggest that low-cost portable NIR spectroscopy can be a valuable tool for detecting mislabeled frozen-thawed products sold as fresh, providing consumers with a rapid and affordable method for fraud detection. • Low-cost NIR sensors can discriminate fresh from thawed mackerel fish. • Scattering and absorbance intensity variation in water peaks allow differentiation. • Models are robust for classification of fish caught in any season. • Freezing system can be identified from different scattering caused by ice crystals. • Low-cost sensors are a feasible tool for consumers to detect fraud.