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Title: Artificial neural network based identification of Campylobacter species by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. Author: Mouwen DJ, Capita R, Alonso-Calleja C, Prieto-Gómez J, Prieto M. Journal: J Microbiol Methods; 2006 Oct; 67(1):131-40. PubMed ID: 16632003. Abstract: Two prototypes of artificial neural network (ANN), multilayer perceptron (MLP), and probabilistic neural network (PNN), were used to analyze infrared (IR) spectral data obtained from intact cells belonging to the species Campylobacter coli and Campylobacter jejuni. In order to establish a consistent identification and typing procedure, mid infrared spectra of these species were obtained by means of a Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscope. FT-IR patterns belonging to 26 isolates subclassified into 4 genotypes were pre-processed (normalized, smoothed and derivatized) and grouped into training, verification and test sets. The two architectures tested (PNN, MLP) were developed and trained to identify or leave unassigned a number of IR patterns. Two window ranges (w(4), 1200 to 900 cm(-1); and w(5), 900 to 700 cm(-1)) in the mid IR spectrum were presented as input to the ANN models functioning as pattern recognition systems. No matter the ANN used all the training sets were correctly identified at subspecies level. For the test set, the four-layer MLP network was found to be specially suitable to recognize FT-IR data since it correctly identified 99.16% of unknowns using the w(4) range, and was fully successful in detecting atypical patterns from closely related Campylobacter strains and other bacterial species. The PNN network obtained lower percentages in assignation and rejection. Overall, ANNs constitute an excellent mathematical tool in microbial identification, since they are able to recognize with a high degree of confidence typical as well as atypical FT-IR fingerprints from Campylobacter spp.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]