Abstract

Measurement of locomotor activity is a valuable tool for analysing factors influencing behaviour and for investigating brain and sleep functions. Several methods have been described in the literature for measuring the amount animal movement but most are flawed or expensive. Here, we describe an open source, modular, low-cost, user-friendly, highly sensitive, non-invasive system that records all the movements of a rat in its cage. Our activity monitoring system quantifies overall free movements of rodents without any markers, using a commercially available CCTV and a newly designed motion detection software developed on a GNU/Linux-operating computer. The operating principle is that the amount of overall movement of an object can be expressed by the difference in total area occupied by the object in two consecutive picture frames. The application is based on software modules that allow the system to be used in highthroughput work-flow. Documentation, example files, source code and binary files can be freely downloaded on the web. In a series of experiments with objects of pre-defined oscillation frequencies and movements, we documented the sensitivity, reproductibility and stability of our system. We also compared data obtained with our system and data obtained with an Actiwatch device. Finally, to validate the system, results obtained from the automated observation of 6 rats during 7 days in a regular light cycle are presented and are accompanied by a stability test. The validity of this system is further demonstrated through the observation of 2 rats in constant dark conditions that displayed the expected free running of their circadian rhythm. In conclusion, the present study describes a system that relies on video frame differences to automatically quantify overall free movements of a rodent without any markers. It allows the monitoring of rats in their own environment for an extended period of time. By using a low-cost, open source hardware/software solution, laboratories can greatly simplify their data acquisition and analysis pipelines and improve their workload.

Highlights

  • Measurement of locomotor activity is a valuable tool for analysing factors influencing behaviour and for investigating brain function

  • Our system consists of a closed-circuit television (CCTV) camera that non-invasively records all movements of a rat in its own cage

  • The present study describes a system that relies on frame difference video technology

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Measurement of locomotor activity is a valuable tool for analysing factors influencing behaviour and for investigating brain function. The most widely used automated devices for measuring locomotor activity have been stabilimeters [1], microwaves [2], photocell-based systems [3] and running wheels [4]. The latter technology has gradually come to dominate the area, probably because of its reasonable cost and adaptability to varying environmental configurations. These methods in general either present flaws or are of very high cost. A simple, visual observation of behaviour and manual counting of movements is subjective and prone to inter-examiner differences

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call