Abstract

An increasing number of people own dogs due to the emotional benefits they bring to their owners. However, many owners are forced to leave their dogs at home alone, increasing the risk of developing psychological disorders such as separation anxiety, typically accompanied by complex behavioral symptoms including excessive vocalization and destructive behavior. Hence, this work proposes a multi-level hierarchical early detection system for psychological Separation Anxiety (SA) symptoms detection that automatically monitors home-alone dogs starting from the most fundamental postures, followed by atomic behaviors, and then detecting separation anxiety-related complex behaviors. Stacked Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) is utilized at the lowest level to recognize postures using time-series data from wearable sensors. Then, the recognized postures are input into a Complex Event Processing (CEP) engine that relies on knowledge rules employing fuzzy logic (Fuzzy-CEP) for atomic behaviors level and higher complex behaviors level identification. The proposed method is evaluated utilizing data collected from eight dogs recruited based on clinical inclusion criteria. The experimental results show that our system achieves approximately an F1-score of 0.86, proving its efficiency in separation anxiety symptomatic complex behavior monitoring of a home-alone dog.

Highlights

  • This paper proposes an end-to-end, knowledge-based multi-level hierarchical system, which automatically monitors a home-alone cage-free dog starting from Level-1, going through Level-2, and reaching Level-3

  • The performance of the proposed detection monitoring system was evaluated using raw activity sensor data and video recordings of eight dogs recruited based on separation anxiety clinic criteria defined in [42]

  • Models proposed in this paper, and the second experiment to compare its performance models proposed in this paper, and the second experiment to compare its performance with with other

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Summary

Introduction

Owners are forced to leave them at home alone in some cases, increasing the risks of dogs developing psychological disorders such as Separation Anxiety (SA) [4,5]. The latter is considered the most common dog psychiatric disorder, often accompanied by complex behavioral symptoms, such as high-frequency destructive behavior, which damages their surrounding environment, e.g., furniture and appliances, and excessive vocalization, which disturbs the neighboring community [6,7,8]. In the past 20 years, SA symptom observation in dogs was already studied utilizing subjective ratings such as interviewing the owners [6,12] or relying on manual behavior recognition from recorded videos [4,6]

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