4.7 Article

Tracking individual broilers on video in terms of time and distance

Journal

POULTRY SCIENCE
Volume 103, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.psj.2023.103185

Keywords

phenotype; computer vision; sensor; locomotion; deep learning

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Tracking group-housed individual broilers using video can provide valuable information on their health, welfare, and performance. This study conducted a comprehensive analysis on broiler tracking on video and potential tracking errors, highlighting the potential and challenges of phenotyping broiler locomotion. The results emphasized the importance of addressing tracking errors, potential algorithm improvements, and the need for an external animal identification system for efficient locomotion phenotyping.
Tracking group-housed individual broilers using video can provide valuable information on their health, welfare, and performance, allowing breeders to identify novel or indicator traits that aid genetic improvement. However, their similar appearan-ces make tracking individual broilers in a group-housed setting challenging. This study aimed to analyze broiler tracking on video (number of ID-switches, tracking time and distance) and examined potential tracking errors (ID-losses - location, proximity, kinematics) in an experimental pen to enable broiler locomotion pheno-typing. This comprehensive analysis provided insights into the potential and challenges of tracking group-housed broilers on video with regards to phenotyping broiler locomotion. Thirty-nine broilers, of which 35 noncolor marked, were housed in an experimental pen (1.80 pound 2.61 m), and only data at 18 d of age were used. A YOLOv7-tiny model was trained (n = 140), validated (n = 30), and tested (n = 30) on 200 annotated frames to detect the broilers. On the test set, YOLOv7-tiny had a precision, recall, and average precision (@0.5 - Intersection over Union threshold) of 0.99. A multi-object tracker (SORT) was implemented and evaluated on ground-truth trajectories of thirteen white broilers based on 136 min of video data (1-min intervals). The number of ID-switches varied from 5 to 20 (mean: 9.92) per ground-truth trajectory, tracking times ranged from 1 (by definition) to 51 min (mean: 12.36), and tracking distances ranged from 0.01 to 17.07 meters (mean: 1.89) per tracklet. Tracking errors primarily occurred when broilers were occluded by the drinker, and relatively fre-quently when broilers were in close proximity (within 10 cm), with velocity and acceleration appearing to have a lesser impact on tracking errors. The study establishes a 'baseline' for future research and identified the potential and challenges of tracking group-housed individual broilers. The results highlighted the importance of addressing ID-switches, identified potential tracking algorithm improvements, and emphasized the need for an external animal identification system to enable objec-tive, simultaneous and semi-continuous locomotion phe-notyping of group-housed individual broilers.

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