4.7 Article

Food structure, function and artificial intelligence

Journal

TRENDS IN FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 123, Issue -, Pages 251-263

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON
DOI: 10.1016/j.tifs.2022.03.015

Keywords

Food structure; Bio-accessibility; Bioavailability; Functional food; Digital twin; In silico food; Digestion

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This article analyzes the current knowledge of food structure and its potential use in numerically defining sensory and nutritional quality, as well as stability properties. A possible methodology is explored to build mathematical models for simulating and predicting food properties, particularly focusing on pasta structural changes.
Background: The complexity of food structure is such as to hinder its inclusion in mathematical models predicting food properties and transformations, although a considerable impulse is being determined by using artificial intelligence. As a matter of fact, food definition currently neglects the structural description, even in those fields for which structure is demonstrated to have a decisive role, such as nutrition. Scope and approach: This review aims to analyse the current knowledge about the structure of foods and its potential use to numerically define the sensory and nutritional quality, as well as the stability properties. Starting from this information, a possible methodology is explored to build, even in an automated way, mathematical models for simulating and predicting the properties of food. A model pipeline has been proposed and applied to pasta, in particular exploiting the description of the structural changes occurring upon cooking. Key findings and conclusions: Foods may be designed in silico, based on automated pipelines for direct extraction of information on rheological and sensory properties as derived from structure images and from data on the dynamic state of the water. The ultimate goal of these approaches is to make more limited use of expensive and time-consuming experiments on physically prepared foods to get to use digital twins of foods designed in the laboratory.

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