Abstract

Assessing the well-being of an animal is hindered by the limitations of efficient communication between humans and animals. Instead of direct communication, a variety of parameters are employed to evaluate the well-being of an animal. Especially in the field of biomedical research, scientifically sound tools to assess pain, suffering, and distress for experimental animals are highly demanded due to ethical and legal reasons. For mice, the most commonly used laboratory animals, a valuable tool is the Mouse Grimace Scale (MGS), a coding system for facial expressions of pain in mice. We aim to develop a fully automated system for the surveillance of post-surgical and post-anesthetic effects in mice. Our work introduces a semi-automated pipeline as a first step towards this goal. A new data set of images of black-furred laboratory mice that were moving freely is used and provided. Images were obtained after anesthesia (with isoflurane or ketamine/xylazine combination) and surgery (castration). We deploy two pre-trained state of the art deep convolutional neural network (CNN) architectures (ResNet50 and InceptionV3) and compare to a third CNN architecture without pre-training. Depending on the particular treatment, we achieve an accuracy of up to 99% for the recognition of the absence or presence of post-surgical and/or post-anesthetic effects on the facial expression.

Highlights

  • The Directive 2010/63/EU stipulates to fully apply the 3-R-principle of Russel and Burch [1] (Replace, Reduce, Refine) with regard to animal experimentation

  • Afterwards, we manually sorted out false positives and images of low quality, which resulted in a remaining set of 18273 images (13352 from KXN, 2470 from C, and 2451 from IN; 60 female and 64 male C57BL/6JRj mice)

  • Against the background that the weight of the five facial action units varies between different states like illness and pain [5, 66], our data suggests that the procedures we investigated in the present study may induce different facial expressions

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Summary

Introduction

The Directive 2010/63/EU stipulates to fully apply the 3-R-principle of Russel and Burch [1] (Replace, Reduce, Refine) with regard to animal experimentation. Towards a fully automated surveillance of well-being status in laboratory mice using deep learning.

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