Signals and noise: Interpreting behavior to improve welfare insights of PLF systems
ID:1 View Protection:ATTENDEE Updated Time:2025-04-26 10:53:24 Hits:286 Invited speech

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Abstract
Precision livestock farming (PLF) technologies are advancing rapidly, offering opportunities to monitor behavior at unprecedented scales and resolutions. However, ensuring that these data are meaningful for animal welfare requires a clear understanding of the behaviors being measured. Many behaviors commonly captured by sensors, such as feeding, drinking, or grooming, can reflect a range of internal states depending on context. For instance, grooming may reflect environmental cleanliness, social stability, frustration, or anhedonia, while drinking could indicate hydration or abnormal polydipsia. Without grounding these measures in behavioral research, PLF risks misinterpreting normal variation or missing signs of compromised welfare. Abnormal repetitive behaviors, often used as welfare indicators in traditional research, remain underutilized in PLF, likely due to their perceived rarity or subtle expression. To build systems that reliably capture such behaviors and use them for real-time welfare interpretation, we need rigorous and repeatable observations to produce robust ground truth datasets. At the same time, PLF tools themselves may alter the behaviors they aim to monitor or introduce new welfare risks, such as injuries, requiring caution in interpretation. Integrating behavioral science early in PLF development can lead to more meaningful and accurate welfare interpretations. This talk will present a roadmap for bridging behavioral research and PLF applications, using cattle behavior, including insights from years of data collection on abnormal behavior and 24-h patterns of behavioral development, as central examples.
Keywords
cattle,abnormal behavior,animal welfare,animal behavior
Speaker
Blair Downey
Assistant Professor University of Tennessee Knoxville

Submission Author
Blair Downey University of Tennessee Knoxville
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Important Date
  • Conference Date

    Oct 20

    2025

    to

    Oct 23

    2025

  • Apr 15 2025

    Abstract Submission Deadline

  • Jul 10 2025

    Draft paper submission deadline

  • Aug 01 2025

    Final Paper Deadline

  • Aug 31 2025

    Draft Paper Acceptance Notification

  • Oct 23 2025

    Registration deadline

Sponsored By
International Research Center for Animal Environment and Welfare (IRCAEW)
Chinese Society of Agricultural Engineering (CSAE)
China Agricultural University (CAU)
Rongchang District People’s Government
The National Center of Technology Innovation for Pigs
Organized By
Chongqing Academy of Animal Sciences (CAAS)
Key Lab of Agricultural Engineering in Structure and Environment, Chinese Ministry of Agriculture, Beijing, China
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