Lethbridge researcher awarded for AI-powered crop testing tech

A researcher at Lethbridge Polytechnic was awarded a prestigious Research Innovation Award for using AI in developing a low cost, less-wasteful method of crop testing.

Dr. Chandra Singh is the Director of the Advanced Post-harvest Technology Centre, which specializes in management and eventual distribution of harvested crops including grains, pulses, oil seeds, potatoes and sugar beets.

Dr. Singh alongside colleagues from the University of Guelph and the University of Prince Edward Island, were able to utilize artificial intelligence to more accurately assess pulse crop quality without damaging them.

Dr. Singh says this imaging technology can be integrated throughout the pulse supply chain in Canada and abroad quickly. He theorizes this technology can be integrated within the grain industry within three to five years.

Landon Hickok

Landon is a recent graduate of the Radio and Television program at the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology (NAIT) in Edmonton. He previously obtained a diploma for Christian Ministries at Home Church Bible College in Red Deer, Alberta. For years since, he worked on church media with Home Church and later with City Life church in Leduc, Alberta, working on event live-streams and video productions. At NAIT, he was part of the student-run NAIT NewsWatch news program. He led topics ranging from school athletics to local news and international headlines such as the October 7 attack in Israel in 2023. Outside of news, he spent internships in Edmonton sports with the Oilers of the NHL and the Stingers of the CEBL. Now in Lethbridge, he’s here to produce stories to help inform all and to honour Jesus Christ with his work.

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