Hypothesis Testing of Inclusion of the Tolerance Interval for the Assessment of Food Safety.

In the testing of food quality and safety, we contrast the contents of the newly proposed food (genetically modified food) against those of conventional foods. Because the contents vary largely between crop varieties and production environments, we propose a two-sample test of substantial equivalenc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hungyen Chen, Hirohisa Kishino
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4624947?pdf=render
id doaj-e0d308fb2d624578b3de4d85b7cc97f0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e0d308fb2d624578b3de4d85b7cc97f02020-11-25T01:22:07ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011010e014111710.1371/journal.pone.0141117Hypothesis Testing of Inclusion of the Tolerance Interval for the Assessment of Food Safety.Hungyen ChenHirohisa KishinoIn the testing of food quality and safety, we contrast the contents of the newly proposed food (genetically modified food) against those of conventional foods. Because the contents vary largely between crop varieties and production environments, we propose a two-sample test of substantial equivalence that examines the inclusion of the tolerance intervals of the two populations, the population of the contents of the proposed food, which we call the target population, and the population of the contents of the conventional food, which we call the reference population. Rejection of the test hypothesis guarantees that the contents of the proposed foods essentially do not include outliers in the population of the contents of the conventional food. The existing tolerance interval (TI0) is constructed to have at least a pre-specified level of the coverage probability. Here, we newly introduce the complementary tolerance interval (TI1) that is guaranteed to have at most a pre-specified level of the coverage probability. By applying TI0 and TI1 to the samples from the target population and the reference population respectively, we construct a test statistic for testing inclusion of the two tolerance intervals. To examine the performance of the testing procedure, we conducted a simulation that reflects the effects of gene and environment, and residual from a crop experiment. As a case study, we applied the hypothesis testing to test if the distribution of the protein content of rice in Kyushu area is included in the distribution of the protein content in the other areas in Japan.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4624947?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hungyen Chen
Hirohisa Kishino
spellingShingle Hungyen Chen
Hirohisa Kishino
Hypothesis Testing of Inclusion of the Tolerance Interval for the Assessment of Food Safety.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Hungyen Chen
Hirohisa Kishino
author_sort Hungyen Chen
title Hypothesis Testing of Inclusion of the Tolerance Interval for the Assessment of Food Safety.
title_short Hypothesis Testing of Inclusion of the Tolerance Interval for the Assessment of Food Safety.
title_full Hypothesis Testing of Inclusion of the Tolerance Interval for the Assessment of Food Safety.
title_fullStr Hypothesis Testing of Inclusion of the Tolerance Interval for the Assessment of Food Safety.
title_full_unstemmed Hypothesis Testing of Inclusion of the Tolerance Interval for the Assessment of Food Safety.
title_sort hypothesis testing of inclusion of the tolerance interval for the assessment of food safety.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description In the testing of food quality and safety, we contrast the contents of the newly proposed food (genetically modified food) against those of conventional foods. Because the contents vary largely between crop varieties and production environments, we propose a two-sample test of substantial equivalence that examines the inclusion of the tolerance intervals of the two populations, the population of the contents of the proposed food, which we call the target population, and the population of the contents of the conventional food, which we call the reference population. Rejection of the test hypothesis guarantees that the contents of the proposed foods essentially do not include outliers in the population of the contents of the conventional food. The existing tolerance interval (TI0) is constructed to have at least a pre-specified level of the coverage probability. Here, we newly introduce the complementary tolerance interval (TI1) that is guaranteed to have at most a pre-specified level of the coverage probability. By applying TI0 and TI1 to the samples from the target population and the reference population respectively, we construct a test statistic for testing inclusion of the two tolerance intervals. To examine the performance of the testing procedure, we conducted a simulation that reflects the effects of gene and environment, and residual from a crop experiment. As a case study, we applied the hypothesis testing to test if the distribution of the protein content of rice in Kyushu area is included in the distribution of the protein content in the other areas in Japan.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4624947?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT hungyenchen hypothesistestingofinclusionofthetoleranceintervalfortheassessmentoffoodsafety
AT hirohisakishino hypothesistestingofinclusionofthetoleranceintervalfortheassessmentoffoodsafety
_version_ 1725127615049629696