Publication: High-resolution optical imaging for sustainable fish freshness and safety assessment
Type:
Article
Date
2026-04
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier GmbH
Abstract
Fish freshness evaluation is crucial to ensure consumer safety, and rapid assessment is essential for effective and accurate quality control. To overcome the limitations of the gold standards, such as lack of structural depth information, high-time consumption, and labor-intensiveness, high-resolution Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) was employed for real-time monitoring of fish freshness non-invasively. Microstructural changes of eye and skin of Indian Anchovies ( Stolephorus indicus ) specimens were considered as the main freshness parameters during refrigeration storage. Both eye and skin tissues exhibited decreased internal scattering, loss of clarity, boundary weakening, and gradual structural degradations through the OCT observations. The quantitatively assessed variance intensity, entropy, energy, and edge density clearly revealed the internal tissue disruption over storage time due to protein denaturation, oxidative damage, and fluid imbalance. The findings of this study indicate that OCT shows an insightful correlation with microbiological and biochemical spoilage processes, enabling the advanced identification of subtle microstructural changes in fish skin and eye, even at a prior stage of deterioration. Such capability offers an objective and rapid freshness evaluation approach that could greatly benefit supply chain management and post-harvest seafood quality monitoring.
Description
Keywords
Fish freshness evaluation, Food safety monitoring, Light–tissue interaction, Optical coherence tomography, Quantitative optical analysis, Sustainable food quality
