Geometric deep learning enables 3D kinematic profiling across species and environments

Comprehensive descriptions of animal behavior require precise three-dimensional (3D) measurements of whole-body movements. Although two-dimensional approaches can track visible landmarks in restrictive environments, performance drops in freely moving animals, due to occlusions and appearance changes...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature methods 2021-05, Vol.18 (5), p.564-573
Hauptverfasser: Dunn, Timothy W., Marshall, Jesse D., Severson, Kyle S., Aldarondo, Diego E., Hildebrand, David G. C., Chettih, Selmaan N., Wang, William L., Gellis, Amanda J., Carlson, David E., Aronov, Dmitriy, Freiwald, Winrich A., Wang, Fan, Ölveczky, Bence P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Comprehensive descriptions of animal behavior require precise three-dimensional (3D) measurements of whole-body movements. Although two-dimensional approaches can track visible landmarks in restrictive environments, performance drops in freely moving animals, due to occlusions and appearance changes. Therefore, we designed DANNCE to robustly track anatomical landmarks in 3D across species and behaviors. DANNCE uses projective geometry to construct inputs to a convolutional neural network that leverages learned 3D geometric reasoning. We trained and benchmarked DANNCE using a dataset of nearly seven million frames that relates color videos and rodent 3D poses. In rats and mice, DANNCE robustly tracked dozens of landmarks on the head, trunk, and limbs of freely moving animals in naturalistic settings. We extended DANNCE to datasets from rat pups, marmosets, and chickadees, and demonstrate quantitative profiling of behavioral lineage during development. DANNCE enables robust 3D tracking of animals’ limbs and other features in naturalistic environments by making use of a deep learning approach that incorporates geometric reasoning. DANNCE is demonstrated on behavioral sequences from rodents, marmosets, and chickadees.
ISSN:1548-7091
1548-7105
DOI:10.1038/s41592-021-01106-6