Train AI to 'smell' wine for traceability
Professor Alexandre Pouget's research group at Geneva University (Switzerland) recently announced a solution to turn AI into a professional wine smeller, to distinguish the origin of wines, and can be applied to limit scams.
Professor Alexandre Pouget's research group at the University of Geneva (Switzerland) recently announced a solution to turn AI into a professional wine "sniffer" to distinguish the origin of wines, which can be applied to Limit scams.
Frauds about the origin of wine have long been a source of pain in the wine industry, causing losses to Europe of about 3 billion euros each year.
Professor Alexandre Pouget's research team used chromatography to analyze 80 wines from 7 different regions in Bordeaux, made over 12 years.
The AI was taught by scientists to use algorithms based on all the chemicals detected in the wine to find identifiers instead of separating and identifying the compounds that make up the wine mixture.
AI will return results in a grid format. It will group wines with similar characteristics together. From there, based on the difference in concentration of the compounds, AI classifies wine according to each production region corresponding to the 7 survey locations.
AI returns results in almost real time, saving a lot of time compared to analyzing wine samples in the laboratory.
The research team said that developers can apply this technology to create applications that trace the origin of wine for customers to avoid fraud.
Professor Alexandre Pouget expects that the team will continue to research to make the system more complete, possibly adding other analytical functions through algorithms. For example, AI can determine the degree of blending of ingredients in a wine.
You should read it
- The oldest Italian wine in the world is found
- How to Remove Smells from Your Purse
- Should wine be stored in the refrigerator?
- Guide to wine selection
- New finding: Drinking 1 glass of wine has the same effect as 1 hour of gym
- An old wine pitcher for over 1,600 years, no scientist dared to open it very curious
- How to Use Wine on Linux
- 10 ways to open a bottle of wine without a opener
- How to run Windows applications on Linux with Wine
- Drinking a glass of red wine every week can improve your chances of getting pregnant
- How to Use Wine on Linux
- How to Install Wine on Ubuntu
Maybe you are interested
Infographic of Google's Panda penalties Build high quality sites to improve search results Much more great option to replace Windows 10's Night Light feature Google stops displaying content authors in search results [Infographic] History of search engines Panda 4.0 algorithm was updated by Google on May 20, 2014