| Literature DB >> 35804610 |
Jenna V Congdon1,2, Mina Hosseini1,3, Ezekiel F Gading1, Mahdi Masousi3, Maria Franke4, Suzanne E MacDonald1.
Abstract
With many advancements, technologies are now capable of recording non-human animals' location, heart rate, and movement, often using a device that is physically attached to the monitored animals. However, to our knowledge, there is currently no technology that is able to do this unobtrusively and non-invasively. Here, we review the history of technology for use with animals, recent technological advancements, current limitations, and a brief introduction to our proposed novel software. Canadian tech mogul EAIGLE Inc. has developed an artificial intelligence (AI) software solution capable of determining where people and assets are within public places or attractions for operational intelligence, security, and health and safety applications. The solution also monitors individual temperatures to reduce the potential spread of COVID-19. This technology has been adapted for use at the Toronto Zoo, initiated with a focus on Sumatran orangutans (Pongo abelii) given the close physical similarity between orangutans and humans as great ape species. This technology will be capable of mass data collection, individual identification, pose estimation, behaviour monitoring and tracking orangutans' locations, in real time on a 24/7 basis, benefitting both zookeepers and researchers looking to review this information.Entities:
Keywords: Pongo abelii; animal behaviour; animal health; artificial intelligence; conservation; identification; monitoring; orangutan
Year: 2022 PMID: 35804610 PMCID: PMC9265132 DOI: 10.3390/ani12131711
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 3.231
Figure 1An image of EAIGLE’s current artificial intelligence that can identify the number of people in a room (top left), monitor individual body temperature (top center), and flag suspected cases (top right) of COVID-19. This allows the technology to monitor crowds of people and count them (bottom left), while mapping their real-time density on the facility layout (bottom right) as deployed in high-foot traffic facilities and public places.
Figure 2Examples of images collected from five cameras installed in the orangutans’ habitat in Toronto Zoo.
Figure 3A panoramic photo (Google Pixel 5) taken of the indoor orangutan exhibit. Blue boxes indicate the location of each of the five (5) cameras around the perimeter of the enclosure. Orangutan (Sekali) can be seen brachiating between bars.
Figure 4A blueprint of the indoor orangutan exhibit study area. The location of each of the five (5) cameras is indicated above in red. Beige (middle) indicates the dirt ground, light grey (center) indicates the cement ground, dark grey (bottom) indicates to the raised walkway and platform, and blue (upper right) indicates the water of the moat. Additional grey shapes (throughout) signifies the location of enrichment objects, with green dots referring to the base of the jungle gym bars. Note for scale: Each section of the dark grey walkway is 6 ft wide.
Toronto Zoo Sumatran orangutan information, including name, birth date, current age (range 15–54), biological sex (F = female; M = male), birth place, and defining features.
| Orangutan Name | Birth Date | Current Age | Biological Sex | Birth Place | Defining Features |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Puppe | 1967/09/07 | 54 | F | Sumatra | Dark face with dimpled cheeks; yellow hair around ears and on chin; reddish-orange hair, matted hair on back/legs; medium body size; always haunched with elderly gait/shuffle; curled/stumpy feet |
| Ramai | 1985/10/04 | 36 | F | Toronto Zoo | Oval-shaped face with flesh colour on eyelids (almost white); red hair that falls on forehead; pronounced nipples; medium body size |
| Sekali | 1992/08/18 | 29 | F | Toronto Zoo | Uniformly dark face (cheeks/mouth), with flesh coloured upper eyelids and dots on upper lip; horizontal lines/wrinkles under eyes; long, hanging, smooth orange hair with “bowl-cut”, and lighter orange hair to the sides of the mouth; mixed light and dark orange hair on back (light spot at neck); medium-sized body; brachiates throughout the enclosure |
| Budi | 2006/01/18 | 16 | M | Toronto Zoo | Wide, dark face with pronounced flanges (i.e., cheek pads); dark brown, thick/shaggy hair on body and arms, wavy hair on front of shoulders; large/thick body; stance with rolled shoulders; often climbing throughout enclosure |
| Kembali | 2006/07/24 | 15 | M | Toronto Zoo | Oval/long face with flesh colour around eyes and below nose; dark skin on nose and forehead; small flange bulges; hanging throat; reddish-orange shaggy hair with skin breaks on shoulders and inner arm joints; thicker hair falls down cheeks; large/lanky body; strong, upright gait; often brachiating throughout the enclosure |
| Jingga | 2006/12/15 | 15 | F | Toronto Zoo | Oval/long face with flesh colour around eyes and mouth; full lips; reddish-orange hair with skin breaks on shoulders, inner arm joints, and buttocks; thicker hair falls on forehead and cheeks; medium-small body size |
Figure 5An example of an annotated image for training the artificial intelligence model to identify Sumatran orangutans (“Budi”, lower; “Sekali”, higher). The displayed tool allows for a choice between annotating orangutan vs. zookeeper vs. guest, and identification between the six orangutans.
Figure 6Screen capture of the artificial intelligence detecting an orangutan (“Puppe”). Characteristics include facial details (eyes, mouth, colouration), hair colour and consistency, etc., as compiled from thousands of images. Refer to Table 1 for a list of distinct, individual characteristics that raters used to annotate these images.
Figure 7A flowchart of the orangutan project and extension of the resulting artificial intelligence (AI). The details of each of the three (3) phases of the orangutan project are provided, along with a brief explanation of the extension.
Ethogram of behaviours for Pongo abelii.
| Category | Code | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Foraging | F | Consumption of water or plant matter (e.g., leaves, soft vine barks, soft stalks, and round fleshy parts). Marked by insertion of plant matter into the mouth with the use of the hands. It starts with the use of the hands to pick plant matter from a bunch or pile, to pick apart plant matter and to break plant matter into small pieces. The hands are then used to bring plant matter into the mouth. This is followed by chewing (i.e., open and close movement of the jaw whilst the plant matter is either partially or fully in the mouth). This is culminated by swallowing; that is, the plant matter is no longer in the mouth nor outside the animal and the animal moves to get more. The bout stops when there is a pause in the behaviour >3 s or another behaviour is performed. |
| Brachiation | BR | Arm-over-arm movement along bars or climbing structures. The orangutan is suspended fully from only one or two hands (Full BR) or with the support of a third limb (Partial BR). The movement is slow and there is no air time between alternating grasps on the bars (i.e., at no point will the orangutan be mid-air without support). |
| Locomotion | L | The orangutan moves with the use of limbs from one point in the exhibit to the next point at least within a metre away from the origin. The orangutan may end up in the same location as the origin, but along the path should have gone at least a metre away from the origin. The orangutan may be locomoting bipedally or quadrupedally on plane surfaces such as platforms and the ground. If the orangutan is on climbing structures but is supported by all four limbs, the movement is classified as locomotion. |
| Object Play | OP | Repetitive manipulation and inspection (visual and/or tactile) of inedible objects which are not part of another individual’s body. The individual is visibly engaged (i.e., the facial/head orientation is on the object being manipulated). Inspection or manipulation is done by mouth, hands or feet. Movement may appear like other behavioural categories but the size/speed of movements of limbs are exaggerated. |
| Fiddling | FD | Slow and repetitive manipulation of an object with |
| Inactive | I | The animal stays in the same spot or turns around but does not go beyond a metre from origin. The animal is not engaged in self-directed behaviours, foraging, hiding, defecation, urination, scanning behaviours, or social interaction. The animal may be lying prone, supine, sideways, upright sitting, or quadrupedal, but remains stationary. |
| Affiliative | AF | The animal engages in social interactions with another individual such as allogrooming, begging for food, food sharing, hugging, tolerance. Behaviours would appear to maintain bond as seen by maintenance of close proximity. These behaviours do not have audible vocalizations or vigorous movements. |
| Agonistic | AG | Social interactions with individuals where distance from each other is the outcome unless there is a physical confrontation or fight. The animal may be engaged in, rejection of begging, or avoidance, or vigorously grabbing food from the grasp of the receiver of the interaction. Characterized by vigorous movements towards or away from the other individual. |
| Keeper Directed | KD | Staring, following, locomoting towards the keeper, or obtaining food from the keeper. Attention/ head orientation must be placed on the keeper. The keeper should be visible around the perimeter of the exhibit or in the keeper’s cage. |
| Guest Directed | GD | Staring, following, or moving towards the guests. Attention must be placed on the guest. Volunteers (humans in white shirts and beige trousers are considered guests) |
| Self Directed | SD | Inspection of hair, body, or mouth with hands, feet, mouth or with the use of water or objects such as sticks or non-food enrichment. The body part being inspected is prod repeatedly by any of the abovementioned implements. The animal may scratch, squeeze, poke, or pinch the body part being inspected. Attention does not have to be on the body part. |
| Tech Directed | TD | The animal uses or waits at a computer touchscreen enrichment. |
| Hiding | H | The animal covers itself with a blanket, a leaf, or goes in the bucket such that only a portion of the head is visible. The animal remains stationary. |
| Urination | U | Marked by the presence of darker wet spot on the ground. Urine flows from the hind of the orangutan. The orangutan may be hanging on climbing structures using any combination of limbs or may be sitting at the edge of the moat, platform, or on a bar with the hind facing where the urine would land. |
| Object Manipulation | OM | Moving objects with limbs or the mouth from one point in the enclosure to the other point. There is a very clear purpose that usually stops once the purpose has been achieved (e.g., filling a water bottle). |
| Scanning | SC | The animal makes a short sweeping movement of the head and the eyes stay forward following the gaze. The attention has to be on anything outside the exhibit. The animal may be sitting on the floor or bipedally/quadrupedally locomoting towards a window or the edge of the exhibit. |
| Patrolling | PT | The animal follows a repeated path around a portion or the entirety of the perimeter of the exhibit. The animal seems vigilant with repeated scans as movement happens. |
| Defecation | D | Marked by the presence of fecal matter on the floor. Feces drops from the hind of the orangutan. The orangutan may be hanging on climbing structures using any combination of limbs or may be sitting at the edge of the moat, platform, or on a bar with the hind facing where the feces would land. The orangutan may also reach around such that the feces would land on the palm and the orangutan would drop the collected feces on the floor. The orangutan may also gradually orient the upper body from an upright sitting position to a more acute prone posture. |
| Agitated Movement | AM | Locomotion that is fast, with fast scanning of surroundings, may or may not stop at a destination. Usually follows after a loud noise. Brachiation along the bars is hasty and may involve short air time. Scans towards the keeper’s kitchen or the entrance to the exhibit may be possible. |