Chemometric approaches for calibrating high-throughput spectral imaging setups to support digital plant phenotyping by calibrating and transferring spectral models from a point spectrometer

Puneet Mishra*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

9 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Visible and near-infrared (Vis-NIR) spectral imaging is appearing as a potential tool to support high-throughput digital agricultural plant phenotyping. One of the uses of spectral imaging is to predict non-destructively the chemical constituents in the plants such as nitrogen content which can be related to the functional status of plants. However, before using high-throughput spectral imaging, it requires extensive calibration, just as needed for any other spectral sensor. Calibrating the high-throughput spectral imaging setup can be a challenging task as the resources needed to run experiments in high-throughput setups are far more than performing measurements with point spectrometers. Hence, to supply a resource-efficient approach to calibrate spectral cameras integrated with high-throughput plant phenotyping setups, this study proposes the use of chemometric calibration transfer (CT) and model update. The main idea was to use a point spectrometer to develop the primary model and transfer it to the spectral cameras integrated into the high-throughput setups. The potential of the approach was showed using a real Vis-NIR dataset related to nitrogen prediction in wheat plants measured with point spectrometer, tabletop spectral cameras and spectral cameras integrated with a high-throughput plant phenotyping setup. For CT and model update, direct standardization and parameter-free calibration enhancement approaches were explored. A key aim of this study was to only use and compare techniques that does not require any further optimization as they can be easily implemented by the plant biologist in future applications. The proposed approach based on the transfer of point spectroscopy models to spectral cameras in a high-throughput setup can allow spectral calibrations to be sharable and widely applicable, thus helping the global digital plant phenotyping community.

Original languageEnglish
Article number339154
JournalAnalytica Chimica Acta
Volume1187
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2021

Keywords

  • Calibration transfer
  • Phenotyping
  • Plants
  • Spectroscopy

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