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  An interlaboratory comparison of mid-infrared spectra acquisition: Instruments and procedures matter

Safanelli, J. L., Sanderman, J., Bloom, D., Todd-Brown, K., Parente, L. L., Hengl, T., Adam, S., Albinet, F., Ben-Dor, E., Boot, C. M., Bridson, J. H., Chabrillat, S., Deiss, L., Demattê, J. A., Scott Demyan, M., Dercon, G., Doetterl, S., van Egmond, F., Ferguson, R., Garrett, L. G., Haddix, M. L., Haefele, S. M., Heiling, M., Hernandez-Allica, J., Huang, J., Jastrow, J. D., Karyotis, K., Machmuller, M. B., Khesuoe, M., Margenot, A., Matamala, R., Miesel, J. R., Mouazen, A. M., Nagel, P., Patel, S., Qaswar, M., Ramakhanna, S., Resch, C., Robertson, J., Roudier, P., Sabetizade, M., Shabtai, I., Sherif, F., Sinha, N., Six, J., Summerauer, L., Thomas, C. L., Toloza, A., Tomczyk-Wójtowicz, B., Tsakiridis, N. L., van Wesemael, B., Woodings, F., Zalidis, G. C., Żelazny, W. R. (2023): An interlaboratory comparison of mid-infrared spectra acquisition: Instruments and procedures matter. - Geoderma, 440, 116724.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2023.116724

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Safanelli, José L.1, Author
Sanderman, Jonathan1, Author
Bloom, Dellena1, Author
Todd-Brown, Katherine1, Author
Parente, Leandro L.1, Author
Hengl, Tomislav1, Author
Adam, Sean1, Author
Albinet, Franck1, Author
Ben-Dor, Eyal1, Author
Boot, Claudia M.1, Author
Bridson, James H.1, Author
Chabrillat, S.2, Author                 
Deiss, Leonardo1, Author
Demattê, José A.M.1, Author
Scott Demyan, M.1, Author
Dercon, Gerd1, Author
Doetterl, Sebastian1, Author
van Egmond, Fenny1, Author
Ferguson, Rich1, Author
Garrett, Loretta G.1, Author
Haddix, Michelle L.1, AuthorHaefele, Stephan M.1, AuthorHeiling, Maria1, AuthorHernandez-Allica, Javier1, AuthorHuang, Jingyi1, AuthorJastrow, Julie D.1, AuthorKaryotis, Konstantinos1, AuthorMachmuller, Megan B.1, AuthorKhesuoe, Malefetsane1, AuthorMargenot, Andrew1, AuthorMatamala, Roser1, AuthorMiesel, Jessica R.1, AuthorMouazen, Abdul M.1, AuthorNagel, Penelope1, AuthorPatel, Sunita1, AuthorQaswar, Muhammad1, AuthorRamakhanna, Selebalo1, AuthorResch, Christian1, AuthorRobertson, Jean1, AuthorRoudier, Pierre1, AuthorSabetizade, Marmar1, AuthorShabtai, Itamar1, AuthorSherif, Faisal1, AuthorSinha, Nishant1, AuthorSix, Johan1, AuthorSummerauer, Laura1, AuthorThomas, Cathy L.1, AuthorToloza, Arsenio1, AuthorTomczyk-Wójtowicz, Beata1, AuthorTsakiridis, Nikolaos L.1, Authorvan Wesemael, Bas1, AuthorWoodings, Finnleigh1, AuthorZalidis, George C.1, AuthorŻelazny, Wiktor R.1, Author more..
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1External Organizations, ou_persistent22              
21.4 Remote Sensing, 1.0 Geodesy, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum, ou_146028              

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 Abstract: Diffuse reflectance spectroscopy has been extensively employed to deliver timely and cost-effective predictions of a number of soil properties. However, although several soil spectral laboratories have been established worldwide, the distinct characteristics of instruments and operations still hamper further integration and interoperability across mid-infrared (MIR) soil spectral libraries. In this study, we conducted a large-scale ring trial experiment to understand the lab-to-lab variability of multiple MIR instruments. By developing a systematic evaluation of different mathematical treatments with modeling algorithms, including regular preprocessing and spectral standardization, we quantified and evaluated instruments' dissimilarity and how this impacts internal and shared model performance. We found that all instruments delivered good predictions when calibrated internally using the same instruments' characteristics and standard operating procedures by solely relying on regular spectral preprocessing that accounts for light scattering and multiplicative/additive effects, e.g., using standard normal variate (SNV). When performing model transfer from a large public library (the USDA NSSC-KSSL MIR library) to secondary instruments, good performance was also achieved by regular preprocessing (e.g., SNV) if both instruments shared the same manufacturer. However, significant differences between the KSSL MIR library and contrasting ring trial instruments responses were evident and confirmed by a semi-unsupervised spectral clustering. For heavily contrasting setups, spectral standardization was necessary before transferring prediction models. Non-linear model types like Cubist and memory-based learning delivered more precise estimates because they seemed to be less sensitive to spectral variations than global partial least square regression. In summary, the results from this study can assist new laboratories in building spectroscopy capacity utilizing existing MIR spectral libraries and support the recent global efforts to make soil spectroscopy universally accessible with centralized or shared operating procedures.

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 Dates: 20232023
 Publication Status: Finally published
 Pages: -
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 Rev. Type: -
 Identifiers: DOI: 10.1016/j.geoderma.2023.116724
OATYPE: Hybrid Open Access
GFZPOF: p4 T5 Future Landscapes
GFZPOFCCA: p4 CARF RemSens
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Title: Geoderma
Source Genre: Journal, SCI, Scopus, oa ab 2023
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Pages: - Volume / Issue: 440 Sequence Number: 116724 Start / End Page: - Identifier: CoNE: https://gfzpublic.gfz.de/cone/journals/resource/journals162
Publisher: Elsevier