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Pairwise comparison locomotion scoring for dairy cattle.

Authors :
Gardenier J
Underwood J
Weary DM
Clark CEF
Source :
Journal of dairy science [J Dairy Sci] 2021 May; Vol. 104 (5), pp. 6185-6193. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Mar 02.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Conventional locomotion scoring is a subjective, absolute, and discrete assessment of locomotion. Here we assess pairwise comparison scoring to improve upon the limited intra- and interobserver consistency typical of conventional locomotion scoring. Five observers performed conventional 4-level locomotion scoring using 50 video recordings of dairy cattle, and also assessed 90 pairs of videos (composed from the same 50 recordings) using relative pairwise scoring. Intra- and interobserver consistency of pairwise scores [intraobserver: percentage agreement (PA) = 82%, κ = 0.63; interobserver: PA = 79%, κ = 0.57] were greater than of 4-level absolute scores (intraobserver: PA = 72%, κw = 0.74; interobserver: PA = 56%, κw = 0.59). Pairwise scores were scaled with an optimization method to obtain the position of the 50 recordings on a continuous locomotion scale. These continuous locomotion scores (CLS) were compared with the conventional mean absolute visual locomotion scores (VLS). Correlation between CLS and VLS was strong (τ = 0.69), and consistency between binarized CLS and binarized VLS was high (PA = 84%, κ = 0.66 for threshold VLS ≥1). Just noticeable difference (JND) for locomotion scoring was 0.3 on a 4-level scale ranging from 0 to 3. Pairwise scoring and scaling had the scoring consistency of binary absolute scoring with finer continuous granularity than 4-level absolute scoring. The pairwise scoring method, and associated scaling, offer a more consistent and informative alternative to conventional absolute multilevel locomotion scoring.<br /> (Copyright © 2021 American Dairy Science Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1525-3198
Volume :
104
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of dairy science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33663829
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2020-19356