“…They often can be partly automated or integrated in existing laboratory information management systems. Different microbiological parameters have been analysed using novel cultural techniques in pasteurised milk: coliforms (Foschino, Colombo, Crepaldi, & Baldi, 2003;Kang & Gray, 2002;Madden & Gilmour, 1995;Raybaudi, Zea, Curini, & Martínez, 2005), Pseudomonas species (Van Tassell et al, 2012), Escherichia coli and coliforms (Beloti, Barros, Nunes, De Santana, & Nero, 2002;Feldsine et al, 2005), total bacterial counts and coliforms (Ginn, Packard, & Fox, 1986), standard plate counts, psychrotrophic bacterial counts, and coliforms (Senyk, Kozlowski, Noar, Shipe, & Bandler, 1987) and total viable counts, coliforms, and Enterobacteriaceae (Firstenberg-Eden, Foti, McDougal, & Baker, 2002). Furthermore, novel detection techniques and procedures have been presented for the detection of recontaminants in pasteurised milk, such as the determination of microbial activity using a microrespirometer (Ren & Hsieh, 2005), the detection of coliforms by menadione-catalysed luminol chemiluminescence (Kawasaki et al, 2007), the detection of microbial spoilage of milk using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and chemometrics (Nicolaou & Goodacre, 2008), the application of a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation timeof-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS) and multivariate analysis (Nicolaou, Xu, & Goodacre, 2012), and finally the specific detection of total viable coliforms, as well as viable Enterobacteriaceae, by PCR-based techniques (Soejima, Minami, Ayeshima, & Iwatsuki, 2012a;Soejima, Minami, Yaeshima, & Iwatsuki, 2012b).…”