| Literature DB >> 35464142 |
Christian J M I Klein1,2, Thomas Budiman2, Judith R Homberg3, Dilip Verma2, Jaap Keijer1, Evert M van Schothorst1.
Abstract
Automatization and technological advances have led to a larger number of methods and systems to monitor and measure locomotor activity and more specific behavior of a wide variety of animal species in various environmental conditions in laboratory settings. In rodents, the majority of these systems require the animals to be temporarily taken away from their home-cage into separate observation cage environments which requires manual handling and consequently evokes distress for the animal and may alter behavioral responses. An automated high-throughput approach can overcome this problem. Therefore, this review describes existing automated methods and technologies which enable the measurement of locomotor activity and behavioral aspects of rodents in their most meaningful and stress-free laboratory environment: the home-cage. In line with the Directive 2010/63/EU and the 3R principles (replacement, reduction, refinement), this review furthermore assesses their suitability and potential for group-housed conditions as a refinement strategy, highlighting their current technological and practical limitations. It covers electrical capacitance technology and radio-frequency identification (RFID), which focus mainly on voluntary locomotor activity in both single and multiple rodents, respectively. Infrared beams and force plates expand the detection beyond locomotor activity toward basic behavioral traits but discover their full potential in individually housed rodents only. Despite the great premises of these approaches in terms of behavioral pattern recognition, more sophisticated methods, such as (RFID-assisted) video tracking technology need to be applied to enable the automated analysis of advanced behavioral aspects of individual animals in social housing conditions.Entities:
Keywords: 3Rs; animal tracking; behavior; home-cage; locomotor activity; phenotyping; rodents
Year: 2022 PMID: 35464142 PMCID: PMC9021872 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2022.877323
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.617
FIGURE 1DVC sensor plate of Tecniplast. (A) Graphical illustration of electrical board containing 12 electrodes. (B) Side-view of three adjacent electrodes and the corresponding electromagnetic (EM) field lines. (C) Effect of animal’s presence on the EM field lines. (D) Impact of animal’s presence on electrode signal output (Iannello, 2019).
FIGURE 2The TraffiCage (TSE Systems) uses a RFID matrix underneath the home-cage to track multiple animals in the home-cage.
Commercially available all-in-one RFID systems for home-cage application.
| Company | Product name | Strengths | Limitation | Website | References |
| PhenoSys | MultimouseMonitor | Multiple animals, small footprint | Limited spatial accuracy, 2 standard sizes available |
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| TSE Systems | IntelliCage | Multiple animals (16 mice or 8 rats), small footprint | Fixed size/dimension, only gross trajectories of individuals |
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| TSE Systems | TraffiCage | Multiple animals, several sizes available, small footprint | Limited spatial accuracy |
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| Unified Information Devices | Mouse Matrix | Multiple animals, customizable size/dimension, small footprint | Mice only, not validated yet due to recent market launch |
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Small: Marginal impact on overall space; large: Significant increase of footprint relative to home-cage.
FIGURE 3Large infrared beam frame ActiMot3 (TSE Systems) to measure locomotor activity in rodents.
Frequently applied commercially available IR beam frames for home-cage application.
| Company | Product name | Strengths | Limitations | Website | References |
| AfaSci | SmartCage (basic platform module) | Small footprint | Animal observation only from top view, resolution unknown |
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| Columbus Instruments | Animal Activity Meter: Opto-M4 | High flexibility to re-arrange sensors, in-house HCMS component | Large footprint |
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| Kinder Scientific | SmartFrame | Extendable with additional modules, fits several different home-cages | Large footprint |
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| Omnitech | Custom Home Cage Frame | Interchangeable size for mice/rats, small footprint | Max. 2 sensor-axis per cage, resolution unknown, limited scientific validation |
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| Sable Systems | BXYZ Beam Break Activity Monitor | In-house HCMS component, high spatial (2.5 mm) and temporal (450 Hz) resolution, small footprint | − |
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| San Diego Instruments | Photobeam Activity System | Small footprint | One size, no HCMS component, low spatial resolution (1.2 cm) |
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| TSE Systems | ActiMot3 | In-house HCMS component, 3 standard sizes (incl. interchangeable for mice/rats), extra high spatial resolution (1.25 mm), small footprint | Medium temporal resolution (100 Hz) |
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Small: Marginal impact on overall space; large: Significant increase of footprint relative to home-cage.
FIGURE 4The measurement platform LABORAS turns animal’s movement into electrical signals to analyze an extended set of rodent behavioral patterns (Metris b.v.).
Available force plates for home-cage applications.
| Company | Product name | Strengths | Limitations | Website | References |
| AfaSci | SmartCage (Vibration sensor module) | Small footprint | No stand-alone module, few behavioral parameters (increasable when combined with IR module) |
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| Bioseb | Activmeter | Small footprint | Few behavioral parameters |
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| Metris | LABORAS | Rich behavioral pattern recognition | Large footprint |
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| Sable Systems | ADX- Activity Detector | Small footprint | Limited behavioral parameters (focus on total activity) |
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| Home Cage Activity Counter | Adaptable and modifiable do-it-yourself (DIY) system | Limited behavioral parameters (focus on total activity), large footprint | – |
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Small: Marginal impact on overall space; large: Significant increase of footprint relative to home-cage.
Overview of image-based video-tracking systems to track and analyze behavioral events in multiple rodents simultaneously in a single home-cage/arena.
| Company/Institution/University | Name | Type | Availability | Limitations | Behavioral data output | Max. animals | Identification of unmarked animals | Website | References |
| California Institute of Technology | Motr | Algorithm | Open source | Invasive, manual correction required, limited behavioral pattern recognition | Social | 6 | No (bleaching) |
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| California Institute of Technology | – | All-in-one | DIY | Different fur color required | Social | 2 | Yes (different fur color required) | – |
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| CleverSys | GroupHousedScan | Software | Commercial | Not validated yet | Individual + social | –/4 | – |
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| Hiroshima University | UMATracker | Software | Open Source | Manual correction required after identity swap | Social | 4 | Yes |
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| Loligo Systems | LoliTrack 5 | Software | Commercial | Not validated in rodents yet | Individual + limited social | Yes |
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| National Institute of Health | SCORHE | All-in-one | Open source (software) | Individual identities not maintained, mice only | Individual (grouped) | 25 | Yes |
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| Noldus | EthoVision/PhenoTyper | All-in-one | Commercial | Marking required | Individual + social | 5/16 | No (color marking) | ||
| University of California, San Diego | Smart Vivarium | Algorithm | DIY | Poor identity maintenance after occlusion | Individual | 35 | Yes |
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| Weizmann Institute of Science | – | All-in-one | DIY | Color marking | Social | 4/ > 10 | No (color marking) | – |
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–Software: software package with a graphical user interface.
–Algorithm: source codes which can be implemented in software solutions or require external programming and analyzing platforms, such as MATLAB or Icy.
–Social: measurement of social interaction.
The full power of the system (tracking + behavioral phenotyping) requires solitary housing.
FIGURE 5Machine learning approach of pose estimation (von Ziegler et al., 2021).
FIGURE 6The Home Cage Analyser (Actual Analytics) combines RFID technology with video recording to study behavioral traits in socially interacting rodents (Bains et al., 2016).
Available RFID-assisted video tracking technology.
| Company/Institute | Product name | Environment | Characteristics | Website | References |
| Actual Analytics | Home Cage Analyser | Home Cage | Side-view camera (prone to occlusion), all-in-one apparatus, mice and rats, individual and social parameters, relatively small footprint |
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| Clever Sys Inc. | RFID-Assisted SocialScan | Social arena | Top-view camera, all-in-one apparatus, mice and rats, rodents need to be distinguishable by color/size, Focus on social behavior parameters, small footprint |
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| Institute Pasteur | Live Mouse Tracker | Social arena | Top-view camera, DIY, mice only, individual and rich social behavioral parameters, small footprint |
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Small: Marginal impact on overall space; large: Significant increase of footprint relative to cage environment.
FIGURE 7Overview of different technologies to measure locomotor activity and advanced behavioral traits in individually and group-housed rodents.
Overview of strengths and limitations of current technology used to measure rodents’ locomotor activity and more advanced behavioral aspects in the home-cage.
| Technology | Housing | Advanced behavioral traits | Strengths | Limitation |
| Electrical capacitance | Individual | No | High spatial accuracy, small (data) footprint | Single housing, no behavioral parameters (only locomotor activity), no stand-alone method, mice only |
| RFID | Individual/Group | No | Social housing, reliable animal identification and tracking even with high animal density, small (data) footprint | Low spatial resolution, no behavioral parameters (only locomotor activity), possible data loss due to animal interferences |
| Infrared beam | Individual | Few | High spatiotemporal accuracy, small (data) footprint | Single housing, few behavioral parameters |
| Force plate | Individual | Few | Small (data) footprint | Single housing, few behavioral parameters |
| Video tracking | Individual/Group | Many | Social housing, rich (social) behavioral pattern recognition | Frequent identity swaps require corrections, high processing power, large data footprint |
| RFID-assisted video tracking | Individual/Group | Many | Social housing, rich (social) behavioral pattern recognition, large animal density | High processing power, large (data) footprint |