Real-world systems are usually multivariate and hence usually cannot be adequately described by one selected variable without the risk of serious misrepresentation. Analyzing the effect of one variable at a time by analysis of variance techniques can give useful descriptive information, but this will not give specifi c information about relationships among variables and other important relationships in the entire matrix. Multivariate data analysis was developed in the late 1960s, and used by a number of research groups in analytical and physical organic chemistry due to the introduction of instrumentation giving multivariate responses for each sample analyzed. Development of such methods was also made possible by the availability of computers. Multivariate data analysis involves the use of mathematical and statistical techniques to extract information from complex data sets. The objective of this paper is to briefl y describe and illustrate some multivariate data analysis methods used for grape and wine analysis.
Information about constituents of grape juice, must, and wine can be used for management and decision support systems in order to improve, monitor, and adapt grape and wine production to new challenges. Numerous sensors that gather this information are either currently available or in development. Nevertheless there is still a need to adapt these sensors to special requirements, for example robustness, calibration and maintenance, operating costs, duration, sensitivity, and specificity to a particular application. The sensors commonly used by the wine industry are those that are based on mid-infrared (MIR), near-infrared (NIR), visible (VIS) and ultraviolet (UV) spectroscopy. This article reviews some recent technical solutions for analysis of juice, must and wine based on the combination of infrared spectroscopy and chemometrics.
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