| Literature DB >> 31313137 |
Sabrina Karl1, Magdalena Boch2,3, Zsófia Virányi4, Claus Lamm2, Ludwig Huber4.
Abstract
In recent years, two well-developed methods of studying mental processes in humans have been successively applied to dogs. First, eye-tracking has been used to study visual cognition without distraction in unrestrained dogs. Second, noninvasive functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has been used for assessing the brain functions of dogs in vivo. Both methods, however, require dogs to sit, stand, or lie motionless while yet remaining attentive for several minutes, during which time their brain activity and eye movements are measured. Whereas eye-tracking in dogs is performed in a quiet and, apart from the experimental stimuli, nonstimulating and highly controlled environment, MRI scanning can only be performed in a very noisy and spatially restraining MRI scanner, in which dogs need to feel relaxed and stay motionless in order to study their brain and cognition with high precision. Here we describe in detail a training regime that is perfectly suited to train dogs in the required skills, with a high success probability and while keeping to the highest ethical standards of animal welfare-that is, without using aversive training methods or any other compromises to the dog's well-being for both methods. By reporting data from 41 dogs that successfully participated in eye-tracking training and 24 dogs IN fMRI training, we provide robust qualitative and quantitative evidence for the quality and efficiency of our training methods. By documenting and validating our training approach here, we aim to inspire others to use our methods to apply eye-tracking or fMRI for their investigations of canine behavior and cognition.Entities:
Keywords: Dog training; Domestic dog; Eye-tracking; Functional magnetic resonance imaging; Positive reinforcement
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31313137 PMCID: PMC7148272 DOI: 10.3758/s13428-019-01281-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Res Methods ISSN: 1554-351X
Fig. 1Training snapshots demonstrating the correct position of the head on the chin rest of a standing (middle) or sitting (left, right) dog
Fig. 2A dog watching a video on the small monitor (left), and a side view of the “dog cinema” (right)
Fig. 3Mock scanner: (Left) Dog lying on the movable table in front of the mock scanner. (Middle) Dog in prone position with head in the mock coil. (Right) Patient table, mock bore, loudspeaker, laptops, and display monitor in front of the bore
Fig. 4(Left) Dog lying in prone position on the patient table with its head in the human knee coil; the blue ramp was used for dogs to climb onto the patient table. (Right) The dog lying motionless with bandaged head in the knee coil in the MRI scanner bore
Learning outcomes (training criteria) of the 17 pretraining steps with the mock scanner and the 12 steps with the real MRI scanner
| Training step | Training criterion |
|---|---|
| Mock scanner | |
| 1 | Learn to lie still in prone position on the floor |
| 2 | Learn to lie with the head in the mock coil and put paws under the coil holder |
| 3 | Learn to wear a flexible tube of fabric around the head and follow a vocal signal to put the head into the coil |
| 4 | Stay motionless with head in the coil on the floor for up to 5 min |
| 5 | Walk up and down the ramp |
| 6 | Lay down on the patient table |
| 7 | Stay still in prone position on the moving patient table |
| 8 | Stay still in prone position while being completely moved into mock scanner bore |
| 9 | Learn step by step to get used to wear human ear plugs (over sessions) |
| 10 | Habituate to gradually increased volume of different playback sounds of the future MRI scanner—up to 90–100 dB (over sessions) |
| 11 | Stay motionless with head in the coil in front of the mock scanner bore for up to 5 min |
| 12 | Stay motionless with head in the coil while being moved with the patient table |
| 13 | Stay motionless with head in the coil while being completely moved into mock scanner bore |
| 14 | Stay motionless with head in the coil in the mock scanner bore for up to 5 min |
| 15 | Stay motionless with head in the coil in the mock scanner bore while watching videos for up to 8–10 min (trainer periodically in dog’s field of view) |
| 16 | Stay motionless with head in the coil in the mock scanner bore while watching videos for up to 8–10 min (trainer stands entire period behind the dog) |
| 17 | Learn to wear an elastic bandage around the head |
| Real MRI scanner | |
| 1a | Learn to wear a veterinary head bandage |
| 2a | Habituate to the real scanner environment |
| 3a | Transfer the mock scanner knowledge to the MRI scanner equipment |
| 4a | Experience the scanner surrounding during a running scan |
| 5a | Stay motionless with head in the knee coil in the MRI scanner bore for up to 5 min |
| 6a | Stay motionless with head in the knee coil in the MRI scanner bore with scanner-loud playback sounds for up to 5 min |
| 7a | Being fed in the scanner bore during a running scan |
| 8a | Stay motionless with head in the knee coil in the MRI scanner bore while a real scan sequence starts |
| 9a | Stay motionless with head in the knee coil in the MRI scanner bore while a set of real scan sequences consecutively start and run (functional scan) |
| 10a | Stay motionless with head in the knee coil in the MRI scanner bore during a structural scan for 4–5 min (trainer in front of the dog/scanner) |
| 11a | Stay motionless with head in the knee coil in the MRI scanner bore during a functional scan with monitor in front of the scanner |
| 12a | Stay motionless with head in the knee coil in the MRI scanner bore during a functional scan while watching videos for up to 7 min |
Fig. 6Relationship of age and duration of training (number of sessions until completion) of only the Border Collies trained for fMRI with the mock scanner (N = 16). The dashed line shows the fitted values, and the upper and lower finely dotted lines represent the confidence intervals
Fig. 5Relationship of age and duration of training (number of sessions until completion) of subjects trained for eye-tracking on the large back-projection screen (N = 41). Females are depicted with upright gray and males with upside-down black triangles. The sizes of the triangles represent the number of individuals per age and the number of sessions (n = 8 to 30). The dashed line shows the fitted values, and the upper and the lower finely dotted lines represent the confidence intervals
Fig. 7Total motion of seven dogs during their first attempt at actual data collection. The total translation motion (x, left–right; y, forward-backward; z, up-down) was calculated as the Euclidean distance (the square root of x2 + y2 + z2) from the start position. Movement parameters were generated using the Statistical Parametric Mapping software package (SPM12, Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, UCL, London, UK) and plotted using the R package ggplot2 (Wickham, 2016). Total rotational motion is provided in Fig. S6