A semiautomatic method for adding behavioral data to videotape records in combination with the Noldus Observer system

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Abstract

The Observer 3.0 (Noldus, 1991) was used as the base for a time-saving fine analysis of animal behavior. A PC controlled a shuttlebox and a shuttlebox control unit. Learning behavior was recorded on videotapes by an S-VHS camcorder with vertical interval time code (VITC), which was used to generate an observational data file (ODF). The observational system was enhanced by automatically recorded status signals from the PC as event markers on the soundtrack of the videotape. These signals were used to subdivide a training session into numbered trials during generation of the ODF. They were later used for a PC-aided fine analysis of behavioral events, such as attention responses (AR) and orienting responses (OR) during shuttlebox learning. In this way, a large number of both automatically inserted PC event markers and manually inserted, key-defined behavioral events were registered and analyzed effectively in a semiautomatic fashion. The system is illustrated with an analysis of shuttle-box avoidance data from gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus).

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Bischof, A., Stark, H., Blumenstein, R., Wagner, T., Brechmann, A., & Scheich, H. (2001). A semiautomatic method for adding behavioral data to videotape records in combination with the Noldus Observer system. Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, and Computers, 33(4), 549–555. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03195415

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