scholarly journals A deep learning-based approach for feeding behavior recognition of weanling pigs

Author(s):  
MinJu Kim ◽  
YoHan Choi ◽  
JeongNam Lee ◽  
SooJin Sa ◽  
HyunChong Cho
Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 1085
Author(s):  
Kaifeng Zhang ◽  
Dan Li ◽  
Jiayun Huang ◽  
Yifei Chen

The detection of pig behavior helps detect abnormal conditions such as diseases and dangerous movements in a timely and effective manner, which plays an important role in ensuring the health and well-being of pigs. Monitoring pig behavior by staff is time consuming, subjective, and impractical. Therefore, there is an urgent need to implement methods for identifying pig behavior automatically. In recent years, deep learning has been gradually applied to the study of pig behavior recognition. Existing studies judge the behavior of the pig only based on the posture of the pig in a still image frame, without considering the motion information of the behavior. However, optical flow can well reflect the motion information. Thus, this study took image frames and optical flow from videos as two-stream input objects to fully extract the temporal and spatial behavioral characteristics. Two-stream convolutional network models based on deep learning were proposed, including inflated 3D convnet (I3D) and temporal segment networks (TSN) whose feature extraction network is Residual Network (ResNet) or the Inception architecture (e.g., Inception with Batch Normalization (BN-Inception), InceptionV3, InceptionV4, or InceptionResNetV2) to achieve pig behavior recognition. A standard pig video behavior dataset that included 1000 videos of feeding, lying, walking, scratching and mounting from five kinds of different behavioral actions of pigs under natural conditions was created. The dataset was used to train and test the proposed models, and a series of comparative experiments were conducted. The experimental results showed that the TSN model whose feature extraction network was ResNet101 was able to recognize pig feeding, lying, walking, scratching, and mounting behaviors with a higher average of 98.99%, and the average recognition time of each video was 0.3163 s. The TSN model (ResNet101) is superior to the other models in solving the task of pig behavior recognition.


2020 ◽  
Vol 332 ◽  
pp. 108536 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elsbeth A. van Dam ◽  
Lucas P.J.J. Noldus ◽  
Marcel A.J. van Gerven

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