Publication:

Seed and grain imaging Vs subjective inspection methods

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    Authors & editors

    Publisher Milling & Grain
    Year of publication 2017 March
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    Medium Digital
    Edition1
    Topics

    Cereal processes > Cereal and milling science

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    Scope & contentBy Phillip Clancy, Next Instruments International, Sydney, Australia

    Plant breeders, seed producers and grain traders use subjective inspection methods, i.e., visual inspection, separation and counting to determine quality aspects of grains and oil seeds. Depending on the sample and the inspection standards, subjective inspection can take 15 minutes per sample or more. On the other hand, machine vision inspection offers a rapid and more reproducible method of inspecting grains and oil seeds at a fraction of the cost of manual inspection.

    Read about:
    Subjective Vs Objective measurements
    SeedCount Image Analyzer
    So what exactly is it?
    How does SeedCount work?
    SeedCount analysis for rice
    SeedCount analysis of corn
    Cost savings


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