(Press-News.org) Snap a photo of your meal, and artificial intelligence instantly tells you its calorie count, fat content, and nutritional value — no more food diaries or guesswork.
This futuristic scenario is now much closer to reality, thanks to an AI system developed by NYU Tandon School of Engineering researchers that promises a new tool for the millions of people who want to manage their weight, diabetes and other diet-related health conditions.
The technology, detailed in a paper presented at the 6th IEEE International Conference on Mobile Computing and Sustainable Informatics, uses advanced deep-learning algorithms to recognize food items in images and calculate their nutritional content, including calories, protein, carbohydrates and fat.
For over a decade, NYU's Fire Research Group, which includes the paper's lead author Prabodh Panindre and co-author Sunil Kumar, has studied critical firefighter health and operational challenges. Several research studies show that 73-88% of career and 76-87% of volunteer firefighters are overweight or obese, facing increased cardiovascular and other health risks that threaten operational readiness. These findings directly motivated the development of their AI-powered food-tracking system.
"Traditional methods of tracking food intake rely heavily on self-reporting, which is notoriously unreliable," said Panindre, Associate Research Professor of NYU Tandon School of Engineering’s Department of Mechanical Engineering. "Our system removes human error from the equation."
Despite the apparent simplicity of the concept, developing reliable food recognition AI has stumped researchers for years. Previous attempts struggled with three fundamental challenges that the NYU Tandon team appears to have overcome.
"The sheer visual diversity of food is staggering," said Kumar, Professor of Mechanical Engineering at NYU Abu Dhabi and Global Network Professor of Mechanical Engineering at NYU Tandon. "Unlike manufactured objects with standardized appearances, the same dish can look dramatically different based on who prepared it. A burger from one restaurant bears little resemblance to one from another place, and homemade versions add another layer of complexity."
Earlier systems also faltered when estimating portion sizes — a crucial factor in nutritional calculations. The NYU team's advance is their volumetric computation function, which uses advanced image processing to measure the exact area each food occupies on a plate.
The system correlates the area occupied by each food item with density and macronutrient data to convert 2D images into nutritional assessments. This integration of volumetric computations with the AI model enables precise analysis without manual input, solving a longstanding challenge in automated dietary tracking.
The third major hurdle has been computational efficiency. Previous models required too much processing power to be practical for real-time use, often necessitating cloud processing that introduced delays and privacy concerns.
The researchers used a powerful image-recognition technology called YOLOv8 with ONNX Runtime (a tool that helps AI programs run more efficiently) to build a food-identification program that runs on a website instead of as a downloadable app, allowing people to simply visit it using their phone's web browser to analyze meals and track their diet.
When tested on a pizza slice, the system calculated 317 calories, 10 grams of protein, 40 grams of carbohydrates, and 13 grams of fat — nutritional values that closely matched reference standards. It performed similarly well when analyzing more complex dishes such as idli sambhar, a South Indian specialty featuring steamed rice cakes with lentil stew, for which it calculated 221 calories, 7 grams of protein, 46 grams of carbohydrates and just 1 gram of fat.
"One of our goals was to ensure the system works across diverse cuisines and food presentations," said Panindre. "We wanted it to be as accurate with a hot dog — 280 calories according to our system — as it is with baklava, a Middle Eastern pastry that our system identifies as having 310 calories and 18 grams of fat."
The researchers solved data challenges by combining similar food categories, removing food types with too few examples, and giving extra emphasis to certain foods during training. These techniques helped refine their training dataset from countless initial images to a more balanced set of 95,000 instances across 214 food categories.
The technical performance metrics are impressive: the system achieved a mean Average Precision (mAP) score of 0.7941 at an Intersection over Union (IoU) threshold of 0.5. For non-specialists, this means the AI can accurately locate and identify food items approximately 80% of the time, even when they overlap or are partially obscured.
The system has been deployed as a web application that works on mobile devices, making it potentially accessible to anyone with a smartphone. The researchers describe their current system as a "proof-of-concept" that could be refined and expanded for broader healthcare applications very soon.
In addition to Panindre and Kumar, the paper's authors are Praneeth Kumar Thummalapalli and Tanmay Mandal, both master’s degree students in NYU Tandon’s Department of Computer Science and Engineering.
About the New York University Tandon School of Engineering
The NYU Tandon School of Engineering is home to a community of renowned faculty, undergraduate and graduate students united in a mission to understand and create technology that powers cities, enables worldwide communication, fights climate change, and builds healthier, safer, and more equitable real and digital worlds. The school’s culture centers on encouraging rigorous, interdisciplinary collaboration and research; fostering inclusivity, entrepreneurial thinking, and diverse perspectives; and creating innovative and accessible pathways for lifelong learning in STEM. NYU Tandon dates back to 1854, the founding year of both the New York University School of Civil Engineering and Architecture and the Brooklyn Collegiate and Polytechnic Institute. Located in the heart of Brooklyn, NYU Tandon is a vital part of New York University and its unparalleled global network. For more information, visit engineering.nyu.edu.
END
AI food scanner turns phone photos into nutritional analysis
NYU Tandon researchers develop technology to calculate calories and nutrients from food images
2025-03-18
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Looking for donors? Start with where they live
2025-03-18
AUSTIN, Texas -- While nonprofit organizations are growing, their donations are shrinking. The number of nonprofits registered with the Internal Revenue Service grew 25% from 2013 to 2023. But during the past year, both money raised and donor counts have dropped 3%.
Their main challenge is low response rates for fundraising solicitations, says Vijay Mahajan, professor of marketing at Texas McCombs. In turn, a major reason is lack of quality data on donors, which makes it harder to successfully target their appeals.
Nonprofits tend to keep data on active donors, such as how much ...
Mastery of language could predict longevity
2025-03-18
Everyone ages, but, sometimes, people outlive all predictions. Previous research has uncovered an unlikely factor related to longevity: intelligence (Bäckman & MacDonald, 2006; Bosworth & Siegler, 2002).
However, intelligence isn’t a simple characteristic. There are many traits that contribute to it that can be tested—from memory to mathematical logic. In a 2024 Clinical Psychological Science study, Paolo Ghisletta of the University of Geneva linked longevity specifically to one of those traits: verbal fluency, the measure of one’s vocabulary and ability to use ...
Threatened by warming waters, brook trout may be able to adapt to hotter weather
2025-03-18
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Brook trout may have a genetic trick up their scales when it comes to adapting, with limitations, to heatwaves that threaten their existence. Scientists have known for years that brook trout — an iconic coldwater fish species native to streams and lakes in the eastern United States and Canada — are extremely vulnerable to warming temperatures, with more than half of their habitats characterized as highly sensitive and highly vulnerable to such changes by U.S. Forest Service researchers in 2010. Now, a novel study led by researchers ...
AI ring tracks spelled words in American Sign Language
2025-03-18
ITHACA, N.Y. – A Cornell University-led research team has developed an artificial intelligence-powered ring equipped with micro-sonar technology that can continuously and in real time track fingerspelling in American Sign Language (ASL).
In its current form, SpellRing could be used to enter text into computers or smartphones via fingerspelling, which is used in ASL to spell out words without corresponding signs, such as proper nouns, names and technical terms. With further development, the device – believed to be the first of its kind – could revolutionize ASL translation by continuously tracking entire signed words and sentences.
“Many other technologies that recognize ...
What’s behind the ‘pop and slosh’ when opening a swing-top bottle of beer?
2025-03-18
WASHINGTON, March 18, 2025 — In a fun experiment, Max Koch, a researcher at the University of Göttingen in Germany — who also happens to be passionate about homebrewing — decided to use a high-speed camera to capture what occurs while opening a swing-top bottle of homebrew.
When Robert Mettin, who leads the Ultrasound and Cavitation group at the university’s Third Institute of Physics, Biophysics, suggested that Koch should submit the findings to the special “kitchen flows” issue of Physics of Fluids, from AIP Publishing, Koch and his colleagues chose to ...
Adherence to annual lung cancer screening and rates of cancer diagnosis
2025-03-18
About The Study: In this multicenter cohort study of adults undergoing lung cancer screening, screening adherence was associated with increased overall and early-stage lung cancer detection rates; however, adherence decreased annually after baseline screening, suggesting that it is an important lung cancer screening quality metric.
Corresponding author: To contact the corresponding author, Roger Y. Kim, M.D., M.S.C.E., email roger.kim@pennmedicine.upenn.edu.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi: ...
Geographic access to cancer care and treatment and outcomes of early-stage non–small cell lung cancer
2025-03-18
About The Study: In this cohort study, geographic access to cancer care was associated with guideline-recommended treatment for early-stage non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and outcomes, particularly in socially marginalized patients, underscoring the importance of ensuring appropriate geographic allocations of cancer care resources and addressing travel barriers to health care to improve NSCLC treatment, prognosis, and equity.
Corresponding authors: To contact the corresponding ...
Trauma surgeons propose ‘precision transfusion’ approach to pre-hospital care
2025-03-18
When someone is traumatically injured, giving them blood products before they arrive at the hospital – such as at the scene or during emergency transport – can improve their likelihood of survival and recovery. But patients with certain traumatic injuries have better outcomes when administered specific blood components.
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and UPMC scientist-surgeons announced today in Cell Reports Medicine that giving plasma that has been separated from other parts of donated blood improves outcomes in patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) or shock, whereas giving unseparated or “whole” ...
New artificial intelligence tool accelerates disease treatments
2025-03-18
University of Virginia School of Medicine scientists have created a computational tool to accelerate the development of new disease treatments. The tool goes beyond current artificial intelligence (AI) approaches by identifying not just which patient populations may benefit but also how the drugs work inside cells.
The researchers have demonstrated the tool’s potential by identifying a promising candidate to prevent heart failure, a leading cause of death in the United States and around the world.
The new AI tool called LogiRx, can predict how drugs will affect biological processes in the body, helping scientists understand the effects the drugs will have ...
CCA appoints expert panel on enhancing national research infrastructure
2025-03-18
Canada’s research infrastructure is essential to the future of science and innovation, economic prosperity, and well-being throughout the country. At the request of Innovation, Science, and Economic Development Canada, the CCA has formed an expert panel to support the federal government in optimizing Canada’s research infrastructure—from its national-scale scientific facilities to its digital platforms and collaborative networks—through evidence synthesis and strategic insights. Janet King, Chair of Polar Knowledge Canada’s Board of Directors and Vice-Chair of the Canadian Light Source’s Board of Directors, will serve ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Wayne State University research making strides in autonomous vehicle and machine systems to make them safer, more effective
Thorny skates come in snack and party sizes. After a century of guessing, scientists now know why.
When did human language emerge?
Meteorites: A geologic map of the asteroid belt
Study confirms safety and efficacy of higher-dose-per-day radiation for early-stage prostate cancer
Virginia Tech researchers publish revolutionary blueprint to fuse wireless technologies and AI
Illinois study: Extreme heat impacts dairy production, small farms most vulnerable
Continuous glucose monitors can optimize diabetic ketoacidosis management
Time is not the driving influence of forest carbon storage, U-M study finds
Adopting zero-emission trucks and buses could save lives, prevent asthma in Illinois
New fossil discovery reveals how volcanic deposits can preserve the microscopic details of animal tissues
New chromosome barcode system unveils genetic secrets of alfalfa
Reusing old oil and gas wells may offer green energy storage solution
Natural insect predators may serve as allies in spotted lanternfly battle
Rice research team creates universal RNA barcoding system for tracking gene transfer in bacteria
New genetic pathway unlocks drought-resistant cucumbers with fewer branches
New high-definition pictures of the baby universe
Zhou conducting GPU modeling research
Twenty-two year study: Adolescents engaged in fewer external risky behaviors but some report increasing mental health concerns
Leafcutter ants recognize and fight pathogen even 30 days after initial contamination, study shows
Terrorists time their attacks during periods of security or financial crisis
Kansas, Missouri farmers avoid discussing climate change regardless of opinions, study finds
AI food scanner turns phone photos into nutritional analysis
Looking for donors? Start with where they live
Mastery of language could predict longevity
Threatened by warming waters, brook trout may be able to adapt to hotter weather
AI ring tracks spelled words in American Sign Language
What’s behind the ‘pop and slosh’ when opening a swing-top bottle of beer?
Adherence to annual lung cancer screening and rates of cancer diagnosis
Geographic access to cancer care and treatment and outcomes of early-stage non–small cell lung cancer
[Press-News.org] AI food scanner turns phone photos into nutritional analysisNYU Tandon researchers develop technology to calculate calories and nutrients from food images