You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
This Brief concerns the influence of chemistry in the modern food and beverages industry. The world of traditional foods has been soundlessly but increasingly interconnected with the chemical industry in the last century. Different areas are considered in a multidisciplinary approach: - the production of chemical additives and of non-food components needed in the food industry (e.g. packaging materials) - the regulatory perspective of the whole food production chain - commercialization of food commodities - the problem of food safety from the viewpoint of official auditors with medical or veterinarian competencies - new and emerging risks related to food packaging materials - the assessment of the authenticity of edible products. This Brief includes different viewpoints, ranging from the management of allergens and food additives in the food plant to the complex matter of the formulation of traditional products with the consequent production of “alternative” versions of the same food.
This Brief discusses aspects of the increasingly complex production of legal and reliable food products of non-animal origin. It introduces to the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) in the USA (from January 2011), which requires the food industry to follow risk-based approaches with stronger self-regulation of food safety through measures such as the foreign supplier verification programs (FSVPs). The Brief addresses important chemical hazards of vegetable products: their peculiar microbial ecology, that can become responsible for the occurrence of specific foodborne disease outbreaks, and the chemistry of the involved neurotoxins and other dangerous molecules, that can potentially lead to lethal pathological reactions. Finally, the Brief also critically discusses the technology of ready-to-eat vegetable products and chemical and physical modifications used for packed products (respiration of vegetables, colorimetric modifications, etc.).
This book explains the role of food-oriented (or ‘food-centric’) quality system standards in the modern food and beverage industry. It discusses food safety schemes based on the international norm ISO 9001 and the “Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points” approach, and also introduces the new Global Standard for Food Safety (GSFS) and the International Featured Standard (IFS, 7th ed.), outlining standardization for international equivalence (while maintaining the necessary flexibility and independence – which is not always easy an easy task).Providing selected specific examples, it examines the problems of chemical additives and possible cross-contaminations between different production lines, as well as adequate reactions to and handling of intentional adulterations. In addition, it includes a chapter focusing on quality audits and technical data sheets in the food industry, and a final chapter describing the certification of food-grade lubricants in the food industry, especially with regard to allergenic substances.
The complete story of the trekking
The anuual magazine of Sikkim Manipal Institute of Technology, Majhitar.
Are robots taking away our jobs? Those who ask this question have misunderstood digitalisation - it is not an industrial revolution by other means. Sabine Pfeiffer searches for the actual novelties brought about by digitalisation and digital capitalism. In her analysis, she juxtaposes Marx's concept of productive force with the idea of distributive force. From the platform economy to artificial intelligence, Pfeiffer shows that digital capitalism is less about the efficient production of value, but rather about its fast, risk-free, and permanently secured realisation on the markets. The examination of this dynamic and its consequences also leads to the question of how destructive the distributive forces of digital capitalism might be.
Nehmen uns Roboter die Arbeit weg? Wer diese Frage stellt, missversteht die Digitalisierung - sie ist keine industrielle Revolution mit anderen Mitteln. Sabine Pfeiffer sucht nach dem wirklich Neuen hinter der Digitalisierung und dem digitalen Kapitalismus. Sie stellt in ihrer Analyse dem Marx'schen Begriff der Produktivkraft die Idee der Distributivkraft zur Seite. Von der Plattformökonomie bis zur künstlichen Intelligenz wird damit verstehbar: Es geht immer weniger um die effiziente Produktion von Werten, sondern vielmehr um deren schnelle, risikolose und auf Dauer gesicherte Realisierung auf den Märkten. Neben der Untersuchung dieser Dynamik und ihrer Folgen wird auch diskutiert, warum die Digitalisierung als Distributivkraft zu einer ökologischen Destruktivkraft zu werden droht.
This two-volume set (CCIS 1147, CCIS 1148) constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Computer Vision and Image Processing. held in Jaipur, India, in September 2019. The 73 full papers and 10 short papers were carefully reviewed and selected from 202 submissions. The papers are organized according to the following topics: Part I: Biometrics; Computer Forensic; Computer Vision; Dimension Reduction; Healthcare Information Systems; Image Processing; Image segmentation; Information Retrieval; Instance based learning; Machine Learning.Part II: Neural Network; Object Detection; Object Recognition; Online Handwriting Recognition; Optical Character Recognition; Security and Privacy; Unsupervised Clustering.