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Technical Report: Development and validation of continuous monitoring system for calves based on commercially available sensor for humans.

Authors :
Debruyne, Florian
Bokma, Jade
Staessens, Tom
Peña Fernández, Alberto
Berckmans, Daniel
Pardon, Bart
Van Steenkiste, Glenn
Source :
Computers & Electronics in Agriculture. Apr2024, Vol. 219, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• Movesense enables continuous calf heart rate monitoring for extended periods. • Weak correlation between rectal and superficial armpit temperature in calves. • Movesense system attains a high level of posture accuracy compared manually visually labeling of video recordings of individual calves. • Study prospect: calf health & welfare tracking by heart, move & temperature data. In the last decade, development of continuous sensor based monitoring systems for farm animals (Precision Livestock Farming (PLF)) has markedly increased with the aim to automate and improve disease detection. In calves, multiple technologies exist, but most detect only a single parameter, and none are available for continuous heart rate and electrocardiogram (ECG). The objective of this paper was to develop and validate a sensor system, derived from a commercially available sensor for humans, for heart (ECG, heart rate), movement (inertial measurement unit with nine degrees of freedom (IMU9)) and temperature data. Data is sent over Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) to a gateway equipped with a built-in camera for monitoring individual calves. The gateway transmits the data using the Message Queuing Telemetry Transport (MQTT) protocol to a server for long term storage. The data can also be shown on a real-time dashboard. Results indicate a very high correlation for heart rate compared with a widely used veterinary sensor (Pearson correlation coefficient (r) = 0.98), and a high level of accuracy for the movement data for lying versus standing detection (94.3 %). However, a lower correlation between sensor temperature and rectal temperature measurements was observed (r = 0.56). In conclusion, the adapted Movesense system exhibits the capability to accurately measure heart rate and detect the position (lying – standing) of calves but was insufficient as such for temperature monitoring. This sensor system has potential not only for disease detection, but equally for continuous, non-invasive heart rate monitoring, which can be used as an indicator (besides others) for animal welfare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01681699
Volume :
219
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Computers & Electronics in Agriculture
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176246927
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compag.2024.108765