Coffee has changed the course of world history since it came on the scene in the fifteenth century, and it has become no less essential in the years since. The world consumed 22 billion pounds of coffee in 2019, according to the International Coffee Organization. Â
As old and deep as the roots of this beverage are, the tedious quality control process it requires has been long overdue for an upgrade – one that has been developed by researchers in Taiwan and Peru with the help of Lenovo technology and support.Â
Although more than 150 million people drink coffee every day in the United States alone, few know how easily the process that brings their beans from farm to cup can go awry.Â
All these defects and more must be carefully screened out by the manufacturer, and existing products that have been built to aid in the process can only make comparatively rudimentary discriminations based on color and shape. Â
Until recently, this has meant an exhausting manual process with imperfect results. That’s a problem, especially since in the case of some types of defects, a few troubled beans can foul the taste of a whole batch.Â
Now, though, researchers at Yuan Ze University in Taiwan and collaborators in Peru have developed a way to bring the power of augmented intelligence to the rescue, with advancements powered by Lenovo’s high-performance computing system and scaffolded by support from Lenovo’s AI Innovation Center.Â
“It’s very difficult and tedious work,” said Professor Yun-Chia Liang, Yuan Ze University. “We are not trying to replace workers but trying to develop a system to help them.”Â
Peruvian collaborators Prof. CĂ©sar Beltrán Castañón and Dr. Christian E. Portugal Zambrano helped lend insight into the arduous bean-sorting process.Â
“Every time they have the harvest for the coffee beans, they have an intensive labor over there. Everyone just sits in a row and tries to pick the defective ones manually. So, we were thinking, if we have a chance to develop a system like this, we definitely can help them to enhance the quality of inspection,” Liang explained.Â
Though complex to develop, the system is relatively simple to understand. Beans go into a feeder where their images are captured by a camera. Next, deep learning AI is used to label them, quickly determining with high levels of accuracy and precision whether a bean is usable or flawed. This process of inspection and classification uses a single algorithm.Â
Existing coffee bean data from Central de Cooperativas Agrarias Cafetaleras de los Valles de Sandia, Peru, was used to train the deep learning model topology that makes it easier than ever before to separate the good beans from the bad. Â
Lenovo's high-performance computing systems, like ThinkSystem, have helped the complex process speed along. Â
AI is clearly everywhere and becoming increasingly involved in our everyday lives. In what areas have you been surprised to find AI?
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