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Revolutionizing Cow Welfare Monitoring: A Novel Top-View Perspective with Depth Camera-Based Lameness Classification

San Chain Tun, Tsubasa Onizuka, Pyke Tin, Masaru Aikawa, Ikuo Kobayashi, Thi Thi Zin

2024Journal of Imaging26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study innovates livestock health management, utilizing a top-view depth camera for accurate cow lameness detection, classification, and precise segmentation through integration with a 3D depth camera and deep learning, distinguishing it from 2D systems. It underscores the importance of early lameness detection in cattle and focuses on extracting depth data from the cow's body, with a specific emphasis on the back region's maximum value. Precise cow detection and tracking are achieved through the Detectron2 framework and Intersection Over Union (IOU) techniques. Across a three-day testing period, with observations conducted twice daily with varying cow populations (ranging from 56 to 64 cows per day), the study consistently achieves an impressive average detection accuracy of 99.94%. Tracking accuracy remains at 99.92% over the same observation period. Subsequently, the research extracts the cow's depth region using binary mask images derived from detection results and original depth images. Feature extraction generates a feature vector based on maximum height measurements from the cow's backbone area. This feature vector is utilized for classification, evaluating three classifiers: Random Forest (RF), K-Nearest Neighbor (KNN), and Decision Tree (DT). The study highlights the potential of top-view depth video cameras for accurate cow lameness detection and classification, with significant implications for livestock health management.

Topics & Concepts

Artificial intelligenceComputer scienceSegmentationLamenessFeature (linguistics)Feature extractionRandom forestContextual image classificationPattern recognition (psychology)Computer visionMedicineImage (mathematics)RadiologyPhilosophyLinguisticsAnimal Behavior and Welfare StudiesAnimal Disease Management and EpidemiologyMicrobial infections and disease research