PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

The electronic nose knows when your cantaloupe is ripe

The electronic nose knows when your cantaloupe is ripe
2012-04-02
(Press-News.org) Have you ever been disappointed by a cantaloupe from the grocery store? Too ripe? Not ripe enough? Luckily for you, researchers from the University of California, Davis might have found a way to make imperfectly ripe fruit a thing of the past. The method will be published on March 30 in the Journal of Visualized Experiments (JoVE).

"We are involved in a project geared towards developing rapid methods to evaluate ripeness and flavour of fruits," said paper-author Dr. Florence Negre-Zkharov. "We evaluated an electronic nose to see if it can differentiate maturity of fruit, specifically melons. The goal is to develop a tool that can be used post-harvest to better evaluate produce, and develop better breeds."

When fruit ripens, it develops a characteristic volatile blend, indicating its maturity. Traditionally, the gold-standard of evaluating these volatiles has been gas chromatography, but it takes up to an hour to analyze a single sample, which makes it impractical to use outside the lab. Dr. Negre-Zakharov and her team wanted to determine if the much cruder— but much faster— electronic nose was able to determine if the melon they used in the experiment were ripe. It was.

"It's quite encouraging technology for the purposes of determining maturity," she said.

The project is part of the Specialty Crops Research Initiative, funded by the United States Department of Agriculture, which was "established to solve critical industry issues through research and extension activities." Dr. Negre-Zkharov and her team are working on quantitative methods of evaluating fruit-ripeness in the hopes that it will help the industry produce better quality produce.

"It's very impressive that the electronic nose system can do a type of gas chromatography in about a minute. Ultra-fast, indeed. Also, the sample preparation is as easy as making a smoothie at home. Such a user-friendly system could greatly help analysis efficiency in this field," said JoVE Science Editor, Dr. Zhao Chen. "Given the popularity of JoVE video-articles, I expect many researchers will know and adopt this method in their own research."

Since the very nature of the project is to give people useful tools, the researchers decided to publish in JoVE, the only peer reviewed, PubMed-indexed science journal to publish all of its content in both text and video format.

"We thought that the best way to get people to adopt the method was showing a video, instead of publishing a text," said Dr. Negre-Zkharov.

The next step is to take the electronic nose out into the field to determine if it can still determine fruit maturity with all of the background smells interfering— like soil and air-quality. Though the team has already tested the device in the field, they have not yet analyzed their results.

INFORMATION:

To watch the full video article, please click here: http://www.jove.com/video/3821/fruit-volatile-analysis-using-an-electronic-nose

About The Journal of Visualized Experiments:

The Journal of Visualized Experiments (JoVE) is the first and only Pubmed and Medline indexed academic journal devoted to publishing research in the biological sciences in video format. Using an international network of videographers, JoVE films and edits videos of researchers performing new experimental techniques at top universities, allowing students and scientists to learn them much more quickly. As of January 2012 JoVE has released 59 monthly issues including over 1500 video-protocols on experimental approaches in developmental biology, neuroscience, microbiology and other fields.

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
The electronic nose knows when your cantaloupe is ripe

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The link between fast food and depression has been confirmed

2012-04-02
According to a recent study headed by scientists from the University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and the University of Granada, eating commercial baked goods (fairy cakes, croissants, doughnuts, etc.) and fast food (hamburgers, hotdogs and pizza) is linked to depression. Published in the Public Health Nutrition journal, the results reveal that consumers of fast food, compared to those who eat little or none, are 51% more likely to develop depression. Furthermore, a dose-response relationship was observed. In other words this means that "the more fast food you consume, ...

ADHD is over-diagnosed

2012-04-02
What experts and the public have already long suspected is now supported by representative data collected by researchers at Ruhr-Universität Bochum (RUB) and University of Basel: ADHD, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, is over-diagnosed. The study showed that child and adolescent psychotherapists and psychiatrists tend to give a diagnosis based on heuristics, unclear rules of thumb, rather than adhering to recognized diagnostic criteria. Boys in particular are substantially more often misdiagnosed compared to girls. These are the most important results of a study ...

Whether grasping Easter eggs or glass bottles – this robotic hand uses tact

2012-04-02
It may be difficult to imagine, but pouring juice into a plastic cup can be a great challenge to a robot. While one hand holds the glass bottle firmly, the other one must gently grasp the cup. Researchers at Saarland University together with associates in Bologna and Naples have developed a robotic hand that can accomplish both tasks with ease and yet including the actuators is scarcely larger than a human arm. This was made possible by a novel string actuator, making use of small electric motors to twist strings. The robotic hand is thus powerful yet delicate and could ...

Intec Controls Inc. Selects SAP Business One from ProjectLine Solutions as its Integrated Business Management Solution to Propel Growth

2012-04-02
ProjectLine Solutions Inc. (www.projectline.ca), a leading provider of business enterprise and software solutions for small and mid-sized businesses, announces Intec Controls Inc. as one of its newest customers implementing the SAP Business One application. With offices across Western Canada, ProjectLine Solutions will be completing the implementation from its Saskatoon, SK office. Based in Saskatoon, Intec Controls Inc. (www.inteccontrols.ca) represents a number of leading product lines in Saskatchewan and Manitoba from globally recognized manufacturers. In addition ...

Bees 'self-medicate' when infected with some pathogens

Bees self-medicate when infected with some pathogens
2012-04-02
Research from North Carolina State University shows that honey bees "self-medicate" when their colony is infected with a harmful fungus, bringing in increased amounts of antifungal plant resins to ward off the pathogen. "The colony is willing to expend the energy and effort of its worker bees to collect these resins," says Dr. Michael Simone-Finstrom, a postdoctoral research scholar in NC State's Department of Entomology and lead author of a paper describing the research. "So, clearly this behavior has evolved because the benefit to the colony exceeds the cost." Wild ...

Extreme weather threatens rich ecosystems

2012-04-02
Extreme weather such as hurricanes, torrential downpours and droughts will become more frequent in pace with global warming. Consequently, this increases the risk for species extinction, especially in bio diverse ecosystems such as coral reefs and tropical rainforests. Human impact means that flora and fauna become extinct at a rate 100 times higher than normal. Climate change has been deemed as one of the main causes of species depletion. A research team in theoretical biology at Linköping University in Sweden has, through the use of mathematical modelling and simulation, ...

IOM report identifies public health actions for improving the lives of those with epilepsy

2012-04-02
WASHINGTON — An estimated 2.2 million people in the United States live with epilepsy, a complex brain disorder characterized by sudden and often unpredictable seizures. The highest rate of onset occurs in children and older adults, and it affects people of all ethnicities and socio-economic backgrounds, yet this common disorder is widely misunderstood. Epilepsy refers to a spectrum of disorders with seizures that vary in type, cause, severity, and frequency. Many people do not know the causes of epilepsy or what measures to take if they witness a seizure. A new report ...

Honeycombs of magnets could lead to new type of computer processing

Honeycombs of magnets could lead to new type of computer processing
2012-04-02
Scientists have taken an important step forward in developing a new material using nano-sized magnets that could ultimately lead to new types of electronic devices, with greater capacity than is currently feasible, in a study published today in the journal Science. Many modern data storage devices, like hard disk drives, rely on the ability to manipulate the properties of tiny individual magnetic sections, but their overall design is limited by the way these magnetic 'domains' interact when they are close together. Now, researchers from Imperial College London have ...

Declines in Caribbean coral reefs pre-date damage resulting from climate change

Declines in Caribbean coral reefs pre-date damage resulting from climate change
2012-04-02
The decline of Caribbean coral reefs has been linked to the recent effects of human-induced climate change. However, new research led by scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego suggests an even earlier cause. The bad news – humans are still to blame. The good news – relatively simple policy changes can hinder further coral reef decline. Employing a novel excavation technique to reconstruct the timeline of historical change in coral reefs located on the Caribbean side of Panama, a team of scientists led by Scripps alumna Katie Cramer and current ...

Published study finds usage of, reccomendations for dietary supplements high among dietitians

2012-04-02
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Registered dietitians are one of several groups of healthcare professionals who report using dietary supplements as part of their health regimen, according to a newly published study in Nutrition Journal, a peer-reviewed, online journal that focuses on the field of human nutrition. According to data from the 2009 "Life…supplemented" Healthcare Professionals (HCP) Impact Study, 74 percent of dietitians use dietary supplements regularly while 22 percent reported using them occasionally or seasonally. The data also indicated that an overwhelming percentage ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Loss of genetic plant diversity is visible from space

Rare cancer synovial sarcoma reduced using plasma-activated medium

Keck Hospital of USC receives 10th “A” Leapfrog safety grade

Gabapentinoids unlikely to be directly linked to self-harm risk

No-touch vein harvesting has meaningful benefits for heart bypass patients

Single DNA mutation disrupts key tumour-suppressing pathways, elevating blood cancer risk

ChatGPT vs students

Semaglutide treats liver disease in two thirds of patients

Gene therapy restores immune function and extends lives of children with rare immune disorder

VCU-led research highlights semaglutide’s potential for treating fatty liver disease

Does your biological age affect your risk of dementia?

Research collaboration charts global four-stage evolution of inflammatory bowel disease

Ecological Society of America announces 2025 Fellows

Critically endangered axolotls bred in captivity appear able to survive release into both artificial and restored Mexican wetlands, but may need specific temperatures to thrive

Tunnel vision during planning can lead us to neglect negative consequences, but this cognitive bias can be addressed by simply prompting people to explicitly consider them

2.1 kids per woman might not be enough for population survival

New “hidden in plain sight” facial and eye biomarkers for tinnitus severity could unlock path to testing treatments

“Explainable” AI cracks secret language of sticky proteins

Setting, acute reaction and mental health history shape ayahuasca's longer-term psychological effects

National-Level Actions Effective at Tackling Antibiotic Resistance

Machine learning brings new insights to cell’s role in addiction, relapse

The duke mouse brain atlas will accelerate studies of neurological disorders

In VR school, fish teach robots

Every action counts: Global study shows countries can reverse increasing antibiotic resistance

Hiding in plain sight: Researchers uncover the prevalence of ‘curiosity’ virus

Fusion energy: ITER completes world’s largest and most powerful pulsed magnet system with major components built by USA, Russia, Europe, China

New study unlocks how root cells sense and adapt to soil

Landmark experiment sheds new light on the origins of consciousness

Nicotine pouch and e-cigarette use and co-use among U.S. youths

Wildfire smoke exposure and cause-specific hospitalization in older adults

[Press-News.org] The electronic nose knows when your cantaloupe is ripe