Hello list,
 
"Characterization of equine vocalization".
Rebecca Lyn Pond, Michael J. Darre, Peter M. Scheifele, Dave G.  Browning
Journal of Veterinary Behavior, Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages 7-12
 
Abstract
Bioacoustics is the study of sound in animals and includes, but is not  
limited to, animal communication with associated behavior, sound production  
anatomy and neurophysiology, auditory capacities and auditory mechanisms, and  
animal welfare. The present research investigates the vocalizations of 
horses  during stressful situations. Stress can be positive or negative. 
Distress is  anything that affects the animal in a negative way, such as in 
mare 
and foal  separation. Eustress is anything that affects the animal in a 
positive way, such  as morning feeding time in a horse barn. The purpose of the 
current research is  to find spectral differences in the recorded 
vocalizations of stalled horses  that indicate both distress and eustress using 
the 
Hidden Markov Model (HMM).  Greenwood Function Cepstral Coefficient values 
suggest that there are spectral  differences between vocalizations in a 
distress 
and eustress situation. These  consistent results indicate that further 
research to obtain and evaluate  vocalizations of horses may provide a 
productive tool in understanding equine  welfare.
 
David G. Browning
Univ. of Rhode Island

Reply via email to