“…Thus, they provide the unique advantage of differentiating taxonomic entities at the species or subspecies level on the basis of variations in the spectral features of bacterial cells (41). Since the two groundbreaking publications in Nature about the use of infrared spectroscopy (57) and Raman spectroscopy (61) to study microorganisms, these two techniques have been extensively employed to detect and discriminate different microorganisms and have been shown to be useful as real-time typing methods in bacterial epidemiology (3,7,33,34,36,37,48,49,59,60,65,77). Fourier-transformed infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy, in combination with multivariate analyses, has been used to identify and discriminate C. jejuni and C. coli (54,55).…”