Publications by authors named "G Caplen"

Most studies of the effects of housing and husbandry on animals' affective states and welfare investigate the impact of living conditions, comparing for example, animals living in enriched environments with those living in non-enriched ones. in living conditions, including from more to less enriched environments, have also been found to have effects on measures of affective state and welfare in some species. But these studies have not investigated whether it is the that has affected the animals (e.

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The aim of this study was to identify detailed changes in behavior, and in salivary serum amyloid A (SAA), associated with subclinical mastitis. This included standard sickness behaviors, such as decreased activity, feeding and drinking (here labeled "core maintenance" behaviors), and less well-studied social, grooming, and exploratory behaviors (here labeled "luxury" behaviors). Luxury behaviors are biologically predicted to change at lower levels of mastitis infection and are, therefore, particularly relevant to detecting subclinical mastitis.

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Article Synopsis
  • The Conditioned Place Preference (CPP) test measures animals' learned preferences or aversions to locations associated with stimuli.
  • A novel four-chambered CPP test was developed to assess key aspects of animals' affective responses: valence, scale, persistence, and generalization.
  • In experiments with domestic chickens, avoidance was conditioned for locations associated with air puffs and water sprays but not for snake sightings or alarm calls, indicating different levels of affective response and learning outcomes.
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Lameness is common in commercially reared broiler chickens but relationships between lameness and pain (and thus bird welfare) have proved complex, partly because lameness is often partially confounded with factors such as bodyweight, sex and pathology. Thermal nociceptive threshold (TNT) testing explores the neural processing of noxious stimuli, and so can contribute to our understanding of pain. Using an acute model of experimentally induced articular pain, we recently demonstrated that TNT was reduced in lame broiler chickens, and was subsequently attenuated by administration of Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs).

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Pain associated with poultry lameness is poorly understood. The anti-nociceptive properties of two non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) were evaluated using threshold testing in combination with an acute inflammatory arthropathy model. Broilers were tested in six groups (n=8 per group).

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