REAL-TIME BEHAVIOR-BASED ASSESSMENT AND CONTROL OF SWINE THERMAL COMFORT

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Xin and B. Shao
Author(s):  
Mario Mollo Neto ◽  
Mariana Matulovic ◽  
Paulo Sérgio Barbosa dos Santos

This research aims to promote the project for the construction of software, firmware, and micro-controlled hardware, which together allow the automatic control of the temperature and humidity index (THI) in real-time the intensive production environment in poultry and laying hens production houses, thus avoiding productive losses due to the stress to which the birds are subjected. This system aims, from the information from a set of sensors, connected to a microcontroller acquisition and control board, to infer the temperature and humidity index from the measured climatic variables, to enable the corresponding activation of electronic interfaces with electric actuators, for the automatic activation of ventilation devices, humidification and curtain actuation and the lighting of production houses, keeping the environmental conditions of the house within a convenient range of temperature and relative humidity to ensure thermal comfort and thus avoiding bird stress. Thus, helping to mitigate production losses and facilitating managers real-time monitoring of the shed to achieve greater productivity and competitiveness.


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (7) ◽  
pp. 979-988 ◽  
Author(s):  
David DeSteno ◽  
Fred Duong ◽  
Daniel Lim ◽  
Shanyu Kates

Gratitude has been linked to behaviors involving the exchange of resources; it motivates people to repay debts to benefactors. However, given its links to self-control—itself a necessary factor for repaying debts—the possibility arises that gratitude might enhance other virtues unrelated to exchange that depend on an ability to resist temptation. Here, we examined gratitude’s ability to function as a “parent” virtue by focusing on its ability to reduce cheating. Using real-time behavior-based measures of cheating, we demonstrated that gratitude, as opposed to neutrality and the more general positive emotional state of happiness, reduces cheating in both a controlled laboratory setting ( N = 156) and a more anonymous online setting ( N = 141). This finding suggests that not all moral qualities need to be studied in silos but, rather, that hierarchies exist wherein certain virtues might give rise to seemingly unrelated others.


2003 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 280-284
Author(s):  
Koota Muzyamba ◽  
Jin-Wu Qian ◽  
Lin-Yong Shen ◽  
Ya-Nan Zhang

2011 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 233-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian G. Woolley ◽  
Gilbert L. Peterson ◽  
Jared T. Kresge

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
David DeSteno ◽  
Fred Duong ◽  
Daniel Lim ◽  
Shanyu Kates

Gratitude has been linked to behaviors involving the exchange of resources. As such, it motivates people to repay debts to benefactors. However, given its links to self-control – itself a necessary factor for repaying debts – the possibility arises that gratitude might enhance other virtues unrelated to exchange that depend on an ability to resist temptation. Here, we provide an examination of gratitude’s ability to function as a “parent” virtue by focusing on its ability to reduce cheating. Using real-time behavior-based measures of cheating, we demonstrate that gratitude, as opposed to neutrality and the more general positive emotional state of happiness, reduces cheating both in a controlled laboratory setting (N = 156) and a more anonymous online setting (N = 141). This finding suggests that not all moral qualities need not be studied in silos, but rather that hierarchies exist wherein certain virtues might give rise to seemingly unrelated others.


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