Nesting box imager: Contact-free, real-time measurement of activity, surface body temperature, and respiratory rate applied to hibernating mouse models.

Noncontact methods to measure animal activity and physiology are necessary to monitor undisturbed states such as hibernation. Although some noncontact measurement systems are commercially available, they are often incompatible with realistic habitats, which feature freely moving animals in small, cl...

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Main Authors: Nathaniel E Kallmyer, Han Jong Shin, Ethan A Brem, William J Israelsen, Nigel F Reuel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-07-01
Series:PLoS Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000406
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spelling doaj-e0308a3331324303b5b8ca1bd68bf1012021-07-02T16:29:06ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Biology1544-91731545-78852019-07-01177e300040610.1371/journal.pbio.3000406Nesting box imager: Contact-free, real-time measurement of activity, surface body temperature, and respiratory rate applied to hibernating mouse models.Nathaniel E KallmyerHan Jong ShinEthan A BremWilliam J IsraelsenNigel F ReuelNoncontact methods to measure animal activity and physiology are necessary to monitor undisturbed states such as hibernation. Although some noncontact measurement systems are commercially available, they are often incompatible with realistic habitats, which feature freely moving animals in small, cluttered environments. A growing market of single-board computers, microcontrollers, and inexpensive sensors has made it possible to assemble bespoke integrated sensor systems at significantly lower price points. Herein, we describe a custom-built nesting box imager (NBI) that uses a single-board computer (Raspberry Pi) with a passive infrared (IR) motion sensor, silicon charge-coupled device (CCD), and IR camera CCD to monitor the activity, surface body temperature, and respiratory rate of the meadow jumping mouse during hibernation cycles. The data are logged up to 12 samples per minute and postprocessed using custom Matlab scripts. The entire unit can be built at a price point below US$400, which will be drastically reduced as IR (thermal) arrays are integrated into more consumer electronics and become less expensive.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000406
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nathaniel E Kallmyer
Han Jong Shin
Ethan A Brem
William J Israelsen
Nigel F Reuel
spellingShingle Nathaniel E Kallmyer
Han Jong Shin
Ethan A Brem
William J Israelsen
Nigel F Reuel
Nesting box imager: Contact-free, real-time measurement of activity, surface body temperature, and respiratory rate applied to hibernating mouse models.
PLoS Biology
author_facet Nathaniel E Kallmyer
Han Jong Shin
Ethan A Brem
William J Israelsen
Nigel F Reuel
author_sort Nathaniel E Kallmyer
title Nesting box imager: Contact-free, real-time measurement of activity, surface body temperature, and respiratory rate applied to hibernating mouse models.
title_short Nesting box imager: Contact-free, real-time measurement of activity, surface body temperature, and respiratory rate applied to hibernating mouse models.
title_full Nesting box imager: Contact-free, real-time measurement of activity, surface body temperature, and respiratory rate applied to hibernating mouse models.
title_fullStr Nesting box imager: Contact-free, real-time measurement of activity, surface body temperature, and respiratory rate applied to hibernating mouse models.
title_full_unstemmed Nesting box imager: Contact-free, real-time measurement of activity, surface body temperature, and respiratory rate applied to hibernating mouse models.
title_sort nesting box imager: contact-free, real-time measurement of activity, surface body temperature, and respiratory rate applied to hibernating mouse models.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Biology
issn 1544-9173
1545-7885
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Noncontact methods to measure animal activity and physiology are necessary to monitor undisturbed states such as hibernation. Although some noncontact measurement systems are commercially available, they are often incompatible with realistic habitats, which feature freely moving animals in small, cluttered environments. A growing market of single-board computers, microcontrollers, and inexpensive sensors has made it possible to assemble bespoke integrated sensor systems at significantly lower price points. Herein, we describe a custom-built nesting box imager (NBI) that uses a single-board computer (Raspberry Pi) with a passive infrared (IR) motion sensor, silicon charge-coupled device (CCD), and IR camera CCD to monitor the activity, surface body temperature, and respiratory rate of the meadow jumping mouse during hibernation cycles. The data are logged up to 12 samples per minute and postprocessed using custom Matlab scripts. The entire unit can be built at a price point below US$400, which will be drastically reduced as IR (thermal) arrays are integrated into more consumer electronics and become less expensive.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000406
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