Fusarium mycotoxins such as deoxynivalenol (DON), its modified forms, and zearalenone (ZEN) frequently contaminate oats, posing serious health and regulatory concerns. This study assessed the use of visible-near-infrared (Vis-NIR) spectroscopy and near-infrared hyperspectral imaging (NIR-HSI) to classify individual oat grains according to the European legal limits for DON (1,750 μg/kg) and ZEN (100 μg/kg). NIR-HSI consistently outperformed Vis-NIR, achieving classification accuracies (CAs) above 91% and F1-scores above 0.65 for DON, ZEN and combined DON+ZEN detection. The most informative spectral regions were in the NIR ranges of 1000-1250 nm and 1300-1500 nm, associated with Fusarium -induced biochemical and structural changes in oat grains. Reducing the spectral input to 20 selected wavelengths preserved NIR-HSI performance, supporting the feasibility of multispectral implementations. These targeted, non-destructive approaches could enable early removal of the few highly contaminated grains responsible for batch rejection, improving food safety, reducing waste, and enhancing the sustainability of oat processing. • Vis-NIR and NIR-HSI classified DON and ZEN-contaminated oats with >91% accuracy. • Removing ∼9% of grains could reduce DON-3G, 15-ADON and 3-ADON levels by >95%. • Optimal models relied on key wavelengths in the 1000-1200 and 1300-1500 nm ranges. • Reducing models to 20 wavelengths retained >92% accuracy across NIR-HSI methods. • Combined models enabled simultaneous detection of multiple Fusarium mycotoxins.
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Teixido-Orries et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a760a2c6e9836116a2d93a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodcont.2026.112033
Irene Teixido-Orries
Francisco Molino
Carol Verheecke‐Vaessen
Food Control
Cranfield University
Universitat de Lleida
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