Frontiers in Neuroscience (Jun 2019)

STEFTR: A Hybrid Versatile Method for State Estimation and Feature Extraction From the Trajectory of Animal Behavior

  • Shuhei J. Yamazaki,
  • Shuhei J. Yamazaki,
  • Kazuya Ohara,
  • Kentaro Ito,
  • Nobuo Kokubun,
  • Nobuo Kokubun,
  • Takuma Kitanishi,
  • Takuma Kitanishi,
  • Takuma Kitanishi,
  • Daisuke Takaichi,
  • Yasufumi Yamada,
  • Yosuke Ikejiri,
  • Yosuke Ikejiri,
  • Fumie Hiramatsu,
  • Kosuke Fujita,
  • Yuki Tanimoto,
  • Akiko Yamazoe-Umemoto,
  • Koichi Hashimoto,
  • Katsufumi Sato,
  • Ken Yoda,
  • Akinori Takahashi,
  • Akinori Takahashi,
  • Yuki Ishikawa,
  • Azusa Kamikouchi,
  • Shizuko Hiryu,
  • Takuya Maekawa,
  • Koutarou D. Kimura,
  • Koutarou D. Kimura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2019.00626
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Animal behavior is the final and integrated output of brain activity. Thus, recording and analyzing behavior is critical to understand the underlying brain function. While recording animal behavior has become easier than ever with the development of compact and inexpensive devices, detailed behavioral data analysis requires sufficient prior knowledge and/or high content data such as video images of animal postures, which makes it difficult for most of the animal behavioral data to be efficiently analyzed. Here, we report a versatile method using a hybrid supervised/unsupervised machine learning approach for behavioral state estimation and feature extraction (STEFTR) only from low-content animal trajectory data. To demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method, we analyzed trajectory data of worms, fruit flies, rats, and bats in the laboratories, and penguins and flying seabirds in the wild, which were recorded with various methods and span a wide range of spatiotemporal scales—from mm to 1,000 km in space and from sub-seconds to days in time. We successfully estimated several states during behavior and comprehensively extracted characteristic features from a behavioral state and/or a specific experimental condition. Physiological and genetic experiments in worms revealed that the extracted behavioral features reflected specific neural or gene activities. Thus, our method provides a versatile and unbiased way to extract behavioral features from simple trajectory data to understand brain function.

Keywords