Mouse Bio-behavioral Phenotyping Using a Digital Homecage Framework for Long-timescale, High-resolution, and Multi-factor Data Collection and Analytics
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MOTIVATION
Long-term monitoring of behavioral and physiological processes is critical for understanding complex brain-based phenomena and disorders that develop over extended periods, such as chronic stress, circadian disorders, and metabolic conditions. While digital phenotyping is available in humans using smart devices, there remains a deficit in rodent models. To address this lack of long-term rodent phenotyping, we introduce the “Digital Homecage” (DHC) system. Our system uses accessible components and is designed for seamless integration with brain recording technologies.
The Digital Homecage (DHC) allows uninterrupted, long-timescale recording of more than 20 behavioral metrics in single-housed mice, captured at sub-second resolution via video, operant interactions, and wheel-running data. This report demonstrates the DHC’s capacity to enable continuous, automated tracking of behaviors like actigraphy, sleep, grooming, and food choice options over weeks, thereby opening up new avenues for longitudinal analyses of chronic conditions. Data collected reveal circadian patterns in multiple spontaneous behaviors, aligning with known nocturnal tendencies. The system’s potential to facilitate groundbreaking observations on the long-term behavioral correlates of various neuropsychiatric syndromes is aided by open-source software and relatively low cost. The DHC sets the stage for community-driven innovation, potentially transforming our approach to studying complex traits of brain function and behavior in laboratory settings.