Issue 15, 2011

A fully automated iterative moving averaging (AIMA) technique for baseline correction

Abstract

Baseline correction is one of the pre-processing steps in the analysis of metabolite signals from chemometric analytical instruments. Fully automated baseline correction techniques, although more convenient to use, tend to be less accurate than semi-automated baseline correction. A fully automated baseline correction algorithm, the automated iterative moving averaging algorithm (AIMA), is presented and compared with three recently introduced semi-automated algorithms, namely the adaptive iteratively reweighted penalized least squares (airPLS), Asymmetric Least Squares baseline correction (ALS) and a parametric method, using NMR, Raman and HPLC chromatograms. AIMA’s potential in increasing the accuracy of multivariate analysis via SELTI-TOF and LCMS chromatograms was also assessed. The results show that the AIMA’s accuracy is comparable to these semi-automated algorithms and has the advantage of ease of use. An AIMA plug-in for an open source metabolomics analysis tool, MZmine, was also developed. The AIMA plug-in is available at http://padel.nus.edu.sg/software/padelaima.

Graphical abstract: A fully automated iterative moving averaging (AIMA) technique for baseline correction

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
07 Oct 2010
Accepted
18 May 2011
First published
20 Jun 2011

Analyst, 2011,136, 3130-3135

A fully automated iterative moving averaging (AIMA) technique for baseline correction

B. D. Prakash and Y. C. Wei, Analyst, 2011, 136, 3130 DOI: 10.1039/C0AN00778A

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