Hierarchical method and hyperspectral images for classification of blood stains on colored and printed fabrics

José F. Q. Pereira*, Maria Fernanda Pimentel, Ricardo S. Honorato, Rasmus Bro

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)
13 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

This work describes the development of methodology based on the hierarchical soft classification method by combining multivariate analysis techniques and Hyperspectral Near Infrared Images (HSI-NIR) to confirm identification of bloodstains on colored and printed fabrics. The term hierarchical is used to designate that the classification is done sequentially on smaller parts of the data such as first splitting the data into human and non-human etc. Human Blood (HB) and Animal Blood (AB) stains and stains from different commercial products (Common False Positives-CFP) were deposited on ten different fabrics of two types (five synthetic and five cotton-based) and hyperspectral imagens were acquired. The best pre-processing techniques were spectral smoothing (Savitzky-Golay filter, 11 point), Standard Normal Variate (SNV), and Generalized Least Squared Weighted (GLSW) performed in that sequence, to reduce the influence of the fabric on the model. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) models for samples prepared on synthetic fabrics demonstrated a great potential as a filter in discriminating blood samples from common false positives than the models built for samples prepared on cotton fabrics. This was done in a SIMCA-like fashion. The Partial Least Squared Discriminant Analysis (PLS-DA) model was used only to separate HB from AB samples for samples prepared on synthetic fabrics. For the samples prepared on cotton fabric, PLS-DA was also needed to discriminate some CFP from blood samples. PCA and PLS-DA were combined in a hierarchical structure to result in a single aggregated soft classification model. The hierarchical classification model built by a fusion of PCA and PLS-DA showed 100% sensitivity and 98% specificity in distinguishing between HB and Animal Blood and False Positive Samples in synthetic fabric. For stains prepared on cotton fabrics, the hierarchical model showed 95% sensitivity and 98% specificity.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104253
JournalChemometrics and Intelligent Laboratory Systems
Volume210
Number of pages11
ISSN0169-7439
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Keywords

  • Blood stains
  • Fabric
  • Hierarchical model
  • Hyperspectral image
  • Near infrared

Cite this