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Predicting lameness in sheep activity using tri-axial acceleration signals

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Version 1 2021-01-16, 17:26
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posted on 2023-07-20, 04:51 authored by J Barwick, D Lamb, R Dobos, D Schneider, M Welch, Mark TrotterMark Trotter
Lameness is a clinical symptom associated with a number of sheep diseases around the world, having adverse effects on weight gain, fertility, and lamb birth weight, and increasing the risk of secondary diseases. Current methods to identify lame animals rely on labour intensive visual inspection. The aim of this current study was to determine the ability of a collar, leg, and ear attached tri-axial accelerometer to discriminate between sound and lame gait movement in sheep. Data were separated into 10 s mutually exclusive behaviour epochs and subjected to Quadratic Discriminant Analysis (QDA). Initial analysis showed the high misclassification of lame grazing events with sound grazing and standing from all deployment modes. The final classification model, which included lame walking and all sound activity classes, yielded a prediction accuracy for lame locomotion of 82%, 35%, and 87% for the ear, collar, and leg deployments, respectively. Misclassification of sound walking with lame walking within the leg accelerometer dataset highlights the superiority of an ear mode of attachment for the classification of lame gait characteristics based on time series accelerometer data. © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

Funding

Category 4 - CRC Research Income

History

Volume

8

Issue

1

Start Page

1

End Page

16

Number of Pages

16

eISSN

2076-2615

Publisher

M D P I AG, Switzerland

Additional Rights

CC BY 4.0

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

Acceptance Date

2018-01-06

External Author Affiliations

University of New England

Author Research Institute

  • Institute for Future Farming Systems

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Animals

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