Pair housing has been proven to improve calves’ welfare during the pre-weaning phase, potentially promoting positive emotions. Based on the emotional valence hypothesis, according to which positive emotions are mainly processed in the left brain hemisphere, infrared thermography (IRT) may detect changes in eye temperature, particularly thermal asymmetries. This study aimed to evaluate whether pair-housed calves presented ocular thermal asymmetry, compared to individually housed calves during the pre-weaning phase. Fifty-six Friesian female calves from two commercial dairy farms were enrolled and housed either individually or in pairs from birth until 8 weeks of age. IRT images of the lacrimal caruncle of both eyes were collected at 7, 21, 35, and 56 days of age. A linear mixed model tested the effects of housing, farm, year, and timepoint. No significant effect of pair housing on ocular asymmetry emerged, while absolute eye temperatures were significantly higher in pair-housed calves. Moreover, eye temperature declined over time, suggesting reduced arousal and habituation with age. Although the lateralization hypothesis was not confirmed, the study offers insights into IRT for assessing calf emotions and supports further investigation in positive contexts to better explore links between housing, emotional valence, and brain activity.

Through the Calf’s Eye: Exploring Infrared Thermography to Uncover Pair-Housed Calves’ Affective States / G. Pesenti Rossi, S. Barbieri, E. Dalla Costa, M. Minero, E. Canali. - In: ANIMALS. - ISSN 2076-2615. - 16:2(2026 Jan 08), pp. 182.1-182.12. [10.3390/ani16020182]

Through the Calf’s Eye: Exploring Infrared Thermography to Uncover Pair-Housed Calves’ Affective States

G. Pesenti Rossi
Primo
;
S. Barbieri
Secondo
;
E. Dalla Costa;M. Minero
Penultimo
;
E. Canali
Ultimo
2026

Abstract

Pair housing has been proven to improve calves’ welfare during the pre-weaning phase, potentially promoting positive emotions. Based on the emotional valence hypothesis, according to which positive emotions are mainly processed in the left brain hemisphere, infrared thermography (IRT) may detect changes in eye temperature, particularly thermal asymmetries. This study aimed to evaluate whether pair-housed calves presented ocular thermal asymmetry, compared to individually housed calves during the pre-weaning phase. Fifty-six Friesian female calves from two commercial dairy farms were enrolled and housed either individually or in pairs from birth until 8 weeks of age. IRT images of the lacrimal caruncle of both eyes were collected at 7, 21, 35, and 56 days of age. A linear mixed model tested the effects of housing, farm, year, and timepoint. No significant effect of pair housing on ocular asymmetry emerged, while absolute eye temperatures were significantly higher in pair-housed calves. Moreover, eye temperature declined over time, suggesting reduced arousal and habituation with age. Although the lateralization hypothesis was not confirmed, the study offers insights into IRT for assessing calf emotions and supports further investigation in positive contexts to better explore links between housing, emotional valence, and brain activity.
pair housing; infrared thermography imaging; affective states; lateralization; ocular thermal asymmetry.
Settore AGRI-09/C - Zootecnia speciale
   Sistemi alternativi alla stabulazione dei vitelli pre-svezzamento in box individuali (Vitelli CAGE-FREE)
   Vitelli CAGE-FREE
   REGIONE LOMBARDIA - Agricoltura, sovranità alimentare e foreste
   ID progetto 202202313938
8-gen-2026
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/16/2/182
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1209404
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