Any experienced chicken farmer will tell you, the relative contentment
of the birds can be gauged by the sounds they’re making. While this has
generally been accepted as anecdotal folk wisdom, a team of scientists
from the Georgia Institute of Technology and the University of Georgia
are now trying to scientifically verify it. They’re hoping that their
research could lead to better living conditions for the animals, lower
costs to farmers, and higher productivity.
One challenge that they faced involved being able to hear the chickens over the sound of the industrial fans used to circulate the air in the barn. Through the application of signal-processing algorithms, however, they were for the most part able to overcome this problem.
Although the research is far from over, the team members hope that their findings could ultimately be applied to an automated system, in which custom software would continuously analyze a real-time audio feed from a barn. If that software detected a change in vocalizations that indicated a particular problem, it would notify the barn’s control system, which would rectify the situation – if the sounds indicated that the chickens were too hot, for instance, the control system would automatically lower the temperature.
While automated systems do already exist, they don’t respond to feedback from the birds themselves.
If successful, the Georgia system could result in more contented chickens, which would subsequently grow larger, faster, and with less need for medication. The required microphones could also provide a cheaper alternative to more expensive, less robust traditional sensors.
More information is available in the video below.
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