Validation and Comparison of Two Different Pedometers that Could be Used for Automatic Lameness Detection in Dairy Cows

Lameness in dairy cows causes significant losses in dairy production and is an important animal welfare issue. The overall size increase of dairy establishments and the subjectivity of lameness scoring mean that farmers possibly recognise only a relatively small percentage of lame animals in their h...

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Main Authors: I. Lorenzini, K. Schindhelm, B. Haidn, F. Weingut, A. Kossmann, K. Reiter, E. Misha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIDIC Servizi S.r.l. 2017-06-01
Series:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Online Access:https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/1296
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author I. Lorenzini
K. Schindhelm
B. Haidn
F. Weingut
A. Kossmann
K. Reiter
E. Misha
author_facet I. Lorenzini
K. Schindhelm
B. Haidn
F. Weingut
A. Kossmann
K. Reiter
E. Misha
author_sort I. Lorenzini
collection DOAJ
description Lameness in dairy cows causes significant losses in dairy production and is an important animal welfare issue. The overall size increase of dairy establishments and the subjectivity of lameness scoring mean that farmers possibly recognise only a relatively small percentage of lame animals in their herd. Lameness recognition is often only recognised when the underlying pathological process is already well advanced, causing higher veterinary treatment costs, loss of milk yield and pain for the animal. The purpose of a current project at the Bavarian State Research Centre for Agriculture, Germany is to expand on the results of a previous project, which demonstrated that the association between various automatically recorded performance and activity parameters could be used to detect lameness in dairy cattle. The pedometers (“Track a Cow”, ENGS Corporation, Israel) used in said project are able to measure lying behaviour through accelerometers and feeding behaviour by identifying cows at the feeding bins by way of an induction loop. The same pedometers have recently been updated and are to be used in the current project. Therefore the technology’s reliability and validity will be evaluated. At the same time as the validation the data collected by the ENGS “Track a Cow” (“TAC”) pedometers will be compared to that collected by the more cost intensive “ALT” (Activity-Lying-Temperature, IBS Ing.Büro Schleusener, Mixdorf, Germany) tags which have been used successfully for many years, in order to evaluate the cost-benefit ratio of both devices.
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spelling doaj.art-74ed23b70a704f1b9b92ab6913e89d1e2022-12-22T04:14:52ZengAIDIC Servizi S.r.l.Chemical Engineering Transactions2283-92162017-06-015810.3303/CET1758032Validation and Comparison of Two Different Pedometers that Could be Used for Automatic Lameness Detection in Dairy CowsI. LorenziniK. SchindhelmB. HaidnF. WeingutA. KossmannK. ReiterE. MishaLameness in dairy cows causes significant losses in dairy production and is an important animal welfare issue. The overall size increase of dairy establishments and the subjectivity of lameness scoring mean that farmers possibly recognise only a relatively small percentage of lame animals in their herd. Lameness recognition is often only recognised when the underlying pathological process is already well advanced, causing higher veterinary treatment costs, loss of milk yield and pain for the animal. The purpose of a current project at the Bavarian State Research Centre for Agriculture, Germany is to expand on the results of a previous project, which demonstrated that the association between various automatically recorded performance and activity parameters could be used to detect lameness in dairy cattle. The pedometers (“Track a Cow”, ENGS Corporation, Israel) used in said project are able to measure lying behaviour through accelerometers and feeding behaviour by identifying cows at the feeding bins by way of an induction loop. The same pedometers have recently been updated and are to be used in the current project. Therefore the technology’s reliability and validity will be evaluated. At the same time as the validation the data collected by the ENGS “Track a Cow” (“TAC”) pedometers will be compared to that collected by the more cost intensive “ALT” (Activity-Lying-Temperature, IBS Ing.Büro Schleusener, Mixdorf, Germany) tags which have been used successfully for many years, in order to evaluate the cost-benefit ratio of both devices.https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/1296
spellingShingle I. Lorenzini
K. Schindhelm
B. Haidn
F. Weingut
A. Kossmann
K. Reiter
E. Misha
Validation and Comparison of Two Different Pedometers that Could be Used for Automatic Lameness Detection in Dairy Cows
Chemical Engineering Transactions
title Validation and Comparison of Two Different Pedometers that Could be Used for Automatic Lameness Detection in Dairy Cows
title_full Validation and Comparison of Two Different Pedometers that Could be Used for Automatic Lameness Detection in Dairy Cows
title_fullStr Validation and Comparison of Two Different Pedometers that Could be Used for Automatic Lameness Detection in Dairy Cows
title_full_unstemmed Validation and Comparison of Two Different Pedometers that Could be Used for Automatic Lameness Detection in Dairy Cows
title_short Validation and Comparison of Two Different Pedometers that Could be Used for Automatic Lameness Detection in Dairy Cows
title_sort validation and comparison of two different pedometers that could be used for automatic lameness detection in dairy cows
url https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/1296
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AT kschindhelm validationandcomparisonoftwodifferentpedometersthatcouldbeusedforautomaticlamenessdetectionindairycows
AT bhaidn validationandcomparisonoftwodifferentpedometersthatcouldbeusedforautomaticlamenessdetectionindairycows
AT fweingut validationandcomparisonoftwodifferentpedometersthatcouldbeusedforautomaticlamenessdetectionindairycows
AT akossmann validationandcomparisonoftwodifferentpedometersthatcouldbeusedforautomaticlamenessdetectionindairycows
AT kreiter validationandcomparisonoftwodifferentpedometersthatcouldbeusedforautomaticlamenessdetectionindairycows
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