Mastication-Enhanced Taste-Based Classification of Multi-Ingredient Dishes for Robotic Cooking
Authors
Sochacki, Grzegorz
Abdulali, Arsen
Iida, Fumiya
Publication Date
2022-05-04Journal Title
Frontiers in Robotics and AI
Publisher
Frontiers Media S.A.
Volume
9
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Sochacki, G., Abdulali, A., & Iida, F. (2022). Mastication-Enhanced Taste-Based Classification of Multi-Ingredient Dishes for Robotic Cooking. Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 9 https://doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2022.886074
Abstract
Chefs frequently rely on their taste to assess the content and flavor of dishes during cooking. While tasting the food, the mastication process also provides continuous feedback by exposing the taste receptors to food at various stages of chewing. Since different ingredients of the dish undergo specific changes during chewing, the mastication helps to understand the food content. The current methods of electronic tasting, on the contrary, always use a single taste snapshot of a homogenized sample. We propose a robotic setup that uses the mixing to imitate mastication and tastes the dish at two different mastication phases. Each tasting is done using a conductance probe measuring conductance at multiple, spatially distributed points. This data is used to classify 9 varieties of scrambled eggs with tomatoes. We test four different tasting methods and analyze the resulting classification performance, showing a significant improvement over tasting homogenized samples. The experimental results show that tasting at two states of mechanical processing of the food increased classification F1 score to 0.93 in comparison to the traditional tasting of a homogenized sample resulting in F1 score of 0.55. We attribute this performance increase to the fact that different dishes are affected differently by the mixing process, and have different spatial distributions of the salinity. It helps the robot to distinguish between dishes of the same average salinity, but different content of ingredients. This work demonstrates that mastication plays an important role in robotic tasting and implementing it can improve the tasting ability of robotic chefs.
Keywords
Robotics and AI, electronic tongues, mastication, robotic chef, robotic cooking, taste feedback, salinity sensing, conductance sensing
Identifiers
886074
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/frobt.2022.886074
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/337262
Rights
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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