BMC Biology (Dec 2019)

Extracting physiological information in experimental biology via Eulerian video magnification

  • Henrik Lauridsen,
  • Selina Gonzales,
  • Daniela Hedwig,
  • Kathryn L. Perrin,
  • Catherine J. A. Williams,
  • Peter H. Wrege,
  • Mads F. Bertelsen,
  • Michael Pedersen,
  • Jonathan T. Butcher

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12915-019-0716-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 1
pp. 1 – 26

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background Videographic material of animals can contain inapparent signals, such as color changes or motion that hold information about physiological functions, such as heart and respiration rate, pulse wave velocity, and vocalization. Eulerian video magnification allows the enhancement of such signals to enable their detection. The purpose of this study is to demonstrate how signals relevant to experimental physiology can be extracted from non-contact videographic material of animals. Results We applied Eulerian video magnification to detect physiological signals in a range of experimental models and in captive and free ranging wildlife. Neotenic Mexican axolotls were studied to demonstrate the extraction of heart rate signal of non-embryonic animals from dedicated videographic material. Heart rate could be acquired both in single and multiple animal setups of leucistic and normally colored animals under different physiological conditions (resting, exercised, or anesthetized) using a wide range of video qualities. Pulse wave velocity could also be measured in the low blood pressure system of the axolotl as well as in the high-pressure system of the human being. Heart rate extraction was also possible from videos of conscious, unconstrained zebrafish and from non-dedicated videographic material of sand lizard and giraffe. This technique also allowed for heart rate detection in embryonic chickens in ovo through the eggshell and in embryonic mice in utero and could be used as a gating signal to acquire two-phase volumetric micro-CT data of the beating embryonic chicken heart. Additionally, Eulerian video magnification was used to demonstrate how vocalization-induced vibrations can be detected in infrasound-producing Asian elephants. Conclusions Eulerian video magnification provides a technique to extract inapparent temporal signals from videographic material of animals. This can be applied in experimental and comparative physiology where contact-based recordings (e.g., heart rate) cannot be acquired.

Keywords