Ecological inference using data from accelerometers needs careful protocols
TL;DR: In this paper , the absolute accuracy of tri-axial accelerometers was examined and how inaccuracies impact measurements of dynamic body acceleration (DBA), a proxy for energy expenditure, in human participants.
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Abstract: Accelerometers in animal-attached tags are powerful tools in behavioural ecology, they can be used to determine behaviour and provide proxies for movement-based energy expenditure. Researchers are collecting and archiving data across systems, seasons and device types. However, using data repositories to draw ecological inference requires a good understanding of the error introduced according to sensor type and position on the study animal and protocols for error assessment and minimisation. Using laboratory trials, we examine the absolute accuracy of tri-axial accelerometers and determine how inaccuracies impact measurements of dynamic body acceleration (DBA), a proxy for energy expenditure, in human participants. We then examine how tag type and placement affect the acceleration signal in birds, using pigeons Columba livia flying in a wind tunnel, with tags mounted simultaneously in two positions, and back- and tail-mounted tags deployed on wild kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla. Finally, we present a case study where two generations of tag were deployed using different attachment procedures on red-tailed tropicbirds Phaethon rubricauda foraging in different seasons. Bench tests showed that individual acceleration axes required a two-level correction to eliminate measurement error. This resulted in DBA differences of up to 5% between calibrated and uncalibrated tags for humans walking at a range of speeds. Device position was associated with greater variation in DBA, with upper and lower back-mounted tags varying by 9% in pigeons, and tail- and back-mounted tags varying by 13% in kittiwakes. The tropicbird study highlighted the difficulties of attributing changes in signal amplitude to a single factor when confounding influences tend to covary, as DBA varied by 25% between seasons. Accelerometer accuracy, tag placement and attachment critically affect the signal amplitude and thereby the ability of the system to detect biologically meaningful phenomena. We propose a simple method to calibrate accelerometers that can be executed under field conditions. This should be used prior to deployments and archived with resulting data. We also suggest a way that researchers can assess accuracy in previously collected data, and caution that variable tag placement and attachment can increase sensor noise and even generate trends that have no biological meaning.
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Citations
Daily activity timing in the Anthropocene.
Neil A. Gilbert,Kate A. McGinn,Laura A. Nunes,Amy A. Shipley,Jacy Bernath-Plaisted,John D. J. Clare,Penelope W. Murphy,Spencer R. Keyser,Kimberly Thompson,Scott B. Maresh Nelson,Jeremy M. Cohen,Ivy V. Widick,Savannah L. Bartel,John L. Orrock,Benjamin Zuckerberg +14 more
TL;DR: This paper reviewed 1328 studies and found relatively few focusing on anthropogenic effects on activity timing, and suggested three hypotheses to stimulate future research: (i) activity-timing mismatches determine ecological effects, (ii) duration and timing of timescape modification influence effects, and (iii) consequences of altered activity timing vary biogeographically due to broad-scale variation in factors compressing timescapes.
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Ecological inference using data from accelerometers needs careful protocols
TL;DR: In this paper , the absolute accuracy of tri-axial accelerometers was examined and how inaccuracies impact measurements of dynamic body acceleration (DBA), a proxy for energy expenditure, in human participants.
The role of wingbeat frequency and amplitude in flight power
Krishnamoorthy Krishnan,Baptiste Garde,Ashley Bennison,Nik C. Cole,E. L. Cole,J. Darby,Kyle H. Elliott,Adam J. Fell,Agustina Gómez-Laich,Sophie de Grissac,Mark Jessopp,Emmanouil Lempidakis,Yuichi Mizutani,Aurélien Prudor,Michael Quetting,Flavio Quintana,Hermina Robotka,Alexandre Roulin,P. Ryan,Kim Schalcher,Stefan Schoombie,Vikash Tatayah,Fred Tremblay,Henri Weimerskirch,Shannon Whelan,Martin Wikelski,Ken Yoda,Anders Hedenström,Emily L. C. Shepard +28 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors used body-mounted accelerometers for estimating power use in flying birds, as the signal varies with the two major kinematic determinants of aerodynamic power: wingbeat frequency and amplitude, and found that birds were more likely to modulate amplitude for more energy-demanding flight modes, including climbing and take-off.
20
The role of individual variability on the predictive performance of machine learning applied to large bio-logging datasets
Maria Teresa Chimienti,Akiko Kato,Olivia Hicks,Frédéric Angelier,Michaël Beaulieu,Jazel Ouled-Cheikh,Coline Marciau,Thierry Raclot,Meagan Tucker,Danuta M. Wisniewska,André Chiaradia,Yan Ropert-Coudert +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the performance of commonly used artificial intelligence tools on datasets of increasing volume and dimensionality was tested. And they integrated both unsupervised and supervised machine learning approaches to predict behaviours in two penguin species.
Predicting moose behaviors from tri-axial accelerometer data using a supervised classification algorithm
Theresa M. Kirchner,Olivier Devineau,Maria Teresa Chimienti,Daniel B. Thompson,John A. Crouse,Alina L. Evans,Barbara Zimmermann,Ane Eriksen +7 more
TL;DR: The use of animal-borne accelerometer data is demonstrated to distinguish among seven main behaviors of captive moose and the generalizability of the results to individuals in the wild is discussed.
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Tri-axial dynamic acceleration as a proxy for animal energy expenditure; should we be summing values or calculating the vector?
Lama Qasem,Antonia Cardew,Alexis Wilson,Iwan W. Griffiths,Lewis G. Halsey,Emily L. C. Shepard,Adrian C. Gleiss,Rory P. Wilson +7 more
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