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      A Framework to Assess the Impact of New Animal Management Technologies on Welfare: A Case Study of Virtual Fencing

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          Abstract

          To be ethically acceptable, new husbandry technologies and livestock management systems must maintain or improve animal welfare. To achieve this goal, the design and implementation of new technologies need to harness and complement the learning abilities of animals. Here, from literature on the cognitive activation theory of stress (CATS), we develop a framework to assess welfare outcomes in terms of the animal's affective state and its learned ability to predict and control engagement with the environment, including, for example, new technologies. In CATS, animals' perception of their situation occurs through cognitive evaluation of predictability and controllability (P/C) that influence learning and stress responses. Stress responses result when animals are not able to predict or control both positive and negative events. A case study of virtual fencing involving avoidance learning is described. Successful learning occurs when the animal perceives cues to be predictable (audio warning always precedes a shock) and controllable (operant response to the audio cue prevents receiving the shock) and an acceptable welfare outcome ensues. However, if animals are unable to learn the association between the audio and shock cues, the situation retains low P/C leading to states of helplessness or hopelessness, with serious implications for animal welfare. We propose a framework for determining welfare outcomes and highlight examples of how animals' cognitive evaluation of their environment and their ability to learn relates to stress responses. New technologies or systems should ensure that predictability and controllability are not at low levels and that operant tasks align with learning abilities to provide optimal animal welfare outcomes.

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          Most cited references31

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          The cognitive activation theory of stress.

          This paper presents a cognitive activation theory of stress (CATS), with a formal system of systematic definitions. The term "stress" is used for four aspects of "stress", stress stimuli, stress experience, the non-specific, general stress response, and experience of the stress response. These four meanings may be measured separately. The stress response is a general alarm in a homeostatic system, producing general and unspecific neurophysiological activation from one level of arousal to more arousal. The stress response occurs whenever there is something missing, for instance a homeostatic imbalance, or a threat to homeostasis and life of the organism. Formally, the alarm occurs when there is a discrepancy between what should be and what is-between the value a variable should have (set value (SV)), and the real value (actual value (AV)) of the same variable. The stress response, therefore, is an essential and necessary physiological response. The unpleasantness of the alarm is no health threat. However, if sustained, the response may lead to illness and disease through established pathophysiological processes ("allostatic load"). The alarm elicits specific behaviors to cope with the situation. The level of alarm depends on expectancy of the outcome of stimuli and the specific responses available for coping. Psychological defense is defined as a distortion of stimulus expectancies. Response outcome expectancies are defined as positive, negative, or none, to the available responses. This offers formal definitions of coping, hopelessness, and helplessness that are easy to operationalize in man and in animals. It is an essential element of CATS that only when coping is defined as positive outcome expectancy does the concept predict relations to health and disease.
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            Reinforcement, expectancy, and learning.

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              Behavioural indicators of cow comfort: activity and resting behaviour of dairy cows in two types of housing

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Front Vet Sci
                Front Vet Sci
                Front. Vet. Sci.
                Frontiers in Veterinary Science
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                2297-1769
                21 August 2018
                2018
                : 5
                : 187
                Affiliations
                [1] 1CSIRO, Agriculture and Food, FD McMaster Laboratory , Armidale, NSW, Australia
                [2] 2Adjunct to School of Environmental and Rural Science, University of New England , Armidale, NSW, Australia
                Author notes

                Edited by: Christian Nawroth, Leibniz-Institut für Nutztierbiologie (FBN), Germany

                Reviewed by: Céline Tallet, INRA Centre Bretagne-Normandie, France; Andrew David Fisher, University of Melbourne, Australia

                *Correspondence: Caroline Lee caroline.lee@ 123456csiro.au

                This article was submitted to Animal Behavior and Welfare, a section of the journal Frontiers in Veterinary Science

                Article
                10.3389/fvets.2018.00187
                6110809
                30186841
                5f168e3d-3919-4303-960b-ab7fd043705c
                Copyright © 2018 Lee, Colditz and Campbell.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 25 May 2018
                : 20 July 2018
                Page count
                Figures: 2, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 45, Pages: 6, Words: 4776
                Categories
                Veterinary Science
                Perspective

                animal welfare,cattle,cognition,cognitive activation theory of stress,sheep

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