Animal Biotelemetry (Jun 2021)

Automatic identification of differences in behavioral co-occurrence between groups

  • Yiming Tian,
  • Takuya Maekawa,
  • Joseph Korpela,
  • Daichi Amagata,
  • Takahiro Hara,
  • Sakiko Matsumoto,
  • Ken Yoda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40317-021-00242-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Background Recent advances in sensing technologies have enabled us to attach small loggers to animals in their natural habitat. It allows measurement of the animals’ behavior, along with associated environmental and physiological data and to unravel the adaptive significance of the behavior. However, because animal-borne loggers can now record multi-dimensional (here defined as multimodal) time series information from a variety of sensors, it is becoming increasingly difficult to identify biologically important patterns hidden in the high-dimensional long-term data. In particular, it is important to identify co-occurrences of several behavioral modes recorded by different sensors in order to understand an internal hidden state of an animal because the observed behavioral modes are reflected by the hidden state. This study proposed a method for automatically detecting co-occurrence of behavioral modes that differs between two groups (e.g., males vs. females) from multimodal time-series sensor data. The proposed method first extracted behavioral modes from time-series data (e.g., resting and cruising modes in GPS trajectories or relaxed and stressed modes in heart rates) and then identified two different behavioral modes that were frequently co-occur (e.g., co-occurrence of the cruising mode and relaxed mode). Finally, behavioral modes that differ between the two groups in terms of the frequency of co-occurrence were identified. Results We demonstrated the effectiveness of our method using animal-locomotion data collected from male and female Streaked Shearwaters by showing co-occurrences of locomotion modes and diving behavior recorded by GPS and water-depth sensors. For example, we found that the behavioral mode of high-speed locomotion and that of multiple dives into the sea were highly correlated in male seabirds. In addition, compared to the naive method, the proposed method reduced the computation costs by about 99.9%. Conclusion Because our method can automatically mine meaningful behavioral modes from multimodal time-series data, it can be potentially applied to analyzing co-occurrences of locomotion modes and behavioral modes from various environmental and physiological data.

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