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Making the Grade: Ļć½¶Ö±²„scientists apply high-resolution imaging technology to detect poultry quality defects

Making the Grade: Ļć½¶Ö±²„scientists apply high-resolution imaging technology to detect poultry quality defects

Contact: Grace Jones

Anuraj Sukumaran (left), assistant professor in the Mississippi State Department of Poultry Science, and Yuzhen Lu, assistant professor in the Ļć½¶Ö±²„Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering, study imaging technology that detects subsurface defects in poultry.
Anuraj Sukumaran (left), assistant professor in the Mississippi State Department of Poultry Science, and Yuzhen Lu, assistant professor in the Ļć½¶Ö±²„Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering, study imaging technology that detects subsurface defects in poultry. (Photo by David Ammon)

STARKVILLE, Miss.ā€”Mississippi State scientists are applying powerful imaging technology that detects subsurface bruising in fruits as a potential way to identify and grade meat quality defects in poultry.

With the goal of developing an automated, reliable method with less human error than manual inspection, Ļć½¶Ö±²„scientists with the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station are conducting research on the feasibility of sinusoidal-illumination imaging, or SII technology, as that novel tool. The project is funded by the U.S. Department of Agricultureā€™s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

ā€œIf we are successful, this will save time, labor and money by establishing a more consistent way to ensure food quality. Food safety and quality issues can affect the profitability and sustainability of Mississippiā€™s top industry and Americaā€™s most consumed meat,ā€ said Anuraj Sukumaran, an Ļć½¶Ö±²„Department of Poultry Science assistant professor and the studyā€™s co-principal investigator. ā€œIn poultry, the quality issues and defects that affect broiler meat are woody-breast, white striping and spaghetti meat. Weā€™re developing and utilizing the SII imaging technique that aims to detect these defects in broiler meat on processing lines.ā€

Mississippiā€™s poultry industry, with an estimated economic impact of about $20 billion, currently uses manual inspection as the standard for finding defects, with employees inspecting carcasses and separating, one-by-one, the flawed meat from clean meat. A labor-intensive process subject to human evaluation error, manual inspection also has seen recent issues due to industry work shortages. Poultry is evaluated in accordance with national standards as U.S. Grade A, B or C.

Sukumaran said, ā€œOur preliminary imaging results showed that the technology clearly differentiates the four different severity levels of white striping, so that is really promising. We are excited for whatā€™s to come; I expect this to be a great benefit to the industry.ā€

With another year to go before concluding the results of this preliminary research, Yuzhen Lu, assistant professor in MSUā€™s Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering and the projectā€™s principal investigator, along with Sukumaran, said they are anticipating the future.

ā€œOur main goal is to ensure the feasibility of how reliable and consistent this technology and our techniques are when detecting all three defects and their varying grades and levels of severity,ā€ Lu said. ā€œAfter that, our goal is to expand this to a long-term project in which we focus on practical applications and machine learning to further automate and improve the process.ā€

To learn more about the Ļć½¶Ö±²„Department of Poultry Science, visit . Visit the Ļć½¶Ö±²„Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering at To learn more about the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station, visit .

Ļć½¶Ö±²„is Mississippiā€™s leading university, available online at .