Deep Learning for Automatic Detection and Facial Recognition in Japanese Macaques: Illuminating Social Networks
Julien Paulet (UJM), Axel Molina (ENS-PSL), Benjamin Beltzung (IPHC),, Takafumi Suzumura, Shinya Yamamoto, C\'edric Sueur (IPHC, IUF, ANTHROPO LAB)

TL;DR
This study develops deep learning tools for non-invasive face detection and individual identification of Japanese macaques, aiming to facilitate social network analysis without physical tagging.
Contribution
It introduces the first deep learning-based face detector and recognizer for Japanese macaques, providing a foundation for automated social network analysis.
Findings
Face detector achieves 82.2% accuracy
Individual recognizer reaches 83% accuracy
Created a social network benchmark for future validation
Abstract
Individual identification plays a pivotal role in ecology and ethology, notably as a tool for complex social structures understanding. However, traditional identification methods often involve invasive physical tags and can prove both disruptive for animals and time-intensive for researchers. In recent years, the integration of deep learning in research offered new methodological perspectives through automatization of complex tasks. Harnessing object detection and recognition technologies is increasingly used by researchers to achieve identification on video footage. This study represents a preliminary exploration into the development of a non-invasive tool for face detection and individual identification of Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata) through deep learning. The ultimate goal of this research is, using identifications done on the dataset, to automatically generate a social…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsPrimate Behavior and Ecology · Animal Vocal Communication and Behavior · Face Recognition and Perception
