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A Review of Monitoring Techniques for Livestock Respiration and Sounds

Divya Handa, Joshua M. Peschel

2022Frontiers in Animal Science19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This article reviews the different techniques used to monitor the respiration and sounds of livestock. Livestock respiration is commonly assessed visually by observing abdomen fluctuation; however, the traditional methods are time consuming, subjective, being therefore impractical for large-scale operations and must rely on automation. Contact and non-contact technologies are used to automatically monitor respiration rate; contact technologies (e.g., accelerometers, pressure sensors, and thermistors) utilize sensors that are physically mounted on livestock while non-contact technologies (e.g., computer vision, thermography, and sound analysis) enable a non-invasive method of monitoring respiration. This work summarizes the advantages and disadvantages of contact and non-contact technologies and discusses the emerging role of non-contact sensors in automating monitoring for large-scale farming operations. This work is the first in-depth examination of automated monitoring technologies for livestock respiratory diseases; the findings and recommendations are important for livestock researchers and practitioners who can gain a better understanding of these different technologies, especially emerging non-contact sensing.

Topics & Concepts

LivestockAutomationComputer scienceEmerging technologiesAccelerometerWork (physics)Scale (ratio)Risk analysis (engineering)BusinessEngineeringArtificial intelligenceMechanical engineeringGeographyBiologyEcologyCartographyOperating systemEffects of Environmental Stressors on LivestockAnimal Behavior and Welfare StudiesMicrobial infections and disease research
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