Predição da massa corporal de pintinhos por meio de modelos baseados em inteligência artificial

The objective of this work was to develop, validate, and compare 190 artificial intelligence‑based models for predicting the body mass of chicks from 2 to 21 days of age subjected to different duration and intensities of thermal challenge. The experiment was conducted inside four climate‑controlled wind tunnels using 210 chicks. A database containing 840 datasets (from 2 to 21‑day‑old chicks) – with the variables dry‑bulb air temperature, duration of thermal stress (days), chick age (days), and the daily body mass of chicks – was used for network training, validation, and tests of models based on artificial neural networks (ANNs) and neuro‑fuzzy networks (NFNs). The ANNs were most accurate in predicting the body mass of chicks from 2 to 21 days of age after they were subjected to the input variables, and they showed an R² of 0.9993 and a standard error of 4.62 g. The ANNs enable the simulation of different scenarios, which can assist in managerial decision‑making, and they can be embedded in the heating control systems.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ferraz, Patrícia Ferreira Ponciano, Yanagi Junior, Tadayuki, Hernández Julio, Yamid Fabián, Castro, Jaqueline de Oliveira, Gates, Richard Stephen, Reis, Gregory Murad, Campos, Alessandro Torres
Format: Digital revista
Language:eng
Published: Pesquisa Agropecuaria Brasileira 2014
Online Access:https://seer.sct.embrapa.br/index.php/pab/article/view/19029
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Summary:The objective of this work was to develop, validate, and compare 190 artificial intelligence‑based models for predicting the body mass of chicks from 2 to 21 days of age subjected to different duration and intensities of thermal challenge. The experiment was conducted inside four climate‑controlled wind tunnels using 210 chicks. A database containing 840 datasets (from 2 to 21‑day‑old chicks) – with the variables dry‑bulb air temperature, duration of thermal stress (days), chick age (days), and the daily body mass of chicks – was used for network training, validation, and tests of models based on artificial neural networks (ANNs) and neuro‑fuzzy networks (NFNs). The ANNs were most accurate in predicting the body mass of chicks from 2 to 21 days of age after they were subjected to the input variables, and they showed an R² of 0.9993 and a standard error of 4.62 g. The ANNs enable the simulation of different scenarios, which can assist in managerial decision‑making, and they can be embedded in the heating control systems.