26 de septiembre de 2023
Salk scientists create GlowTrack to track human and animal behavior with better resolution and more versatility
Salk scientists create GlowTrack to track human and animal behavior with better resolution and more versatility
LA JOLLA—El movimiento ofrece una ventana a cómo funciona el cerebro y controla el cuerpo. Desde la observación con portapapeles y bolígrafo hasta las técnicas modernas basadas en inteligencia artificial, el seguimiento del movimiento humano y animal ha avanzado mucho. Los métodos actuales de vanguardia utilizan inteligencia artificial para rastrear automáticamente partes del cuerpo a medida que se mueven. Sin embargo, el entrenamiento de estos modelos sigue consumiendo mucho tiempo y está limitado por la necesidad de que los investigadores marquen manualmente cada parte del cuerpo cientos o miles de veces.
Now, Associate Professor Eiman Azim and team have created GlowTrack, a non-invasive movement tracking method that uses fluorescent dye markers to train artificial intelligence. GlowTrack is robust, time-efficient, and high definition—capable of tracking a single digit on a mouse’s paw or hundreds of landmarks on a human hand.

The technique, published in Nature Communicationson September 26, 2023, has applications spanning from biology to robotics to medicine and beyond.
“Over the last several years, there has been a revolution in tracking behavior as powerful artificial intelligence tools have been brought into the laboratory,” says Azim, senior author and holder of the William Scandling Developmental Chair. “Our approach makes these tools more versatile, improving the ways we capture diverse movements in the laboratory. Better quantification of movement gives us better insight into how the brain controls behavior and could aid in the study of movement disorders like amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and Parkinson’s disease.”
Current methods to capture animal movement often require researchers to manually and repeatedly mark body parts on a computer screen—a time-consuming process subject to human error and time constraints. Human annotation means that these methods can usually only be used in a narrow testing environment, since artificial intelligence models specialize to the limited amount of training data they receive. For example, if the light, orientation of the animal’s body, camera angle, or any number of other factors were to change, the model would no longer recognize the tracked body part.
To address these limitations, the researchers used fluorescent dye to label parts of the animal or human body. With these “invisible” fluorescent dye markers, an enormous amount of visually diverse data can be created quickly and fed into the artificial intelligence models without the need for human annotation. Once fed this robust data, these models can be used to track movements across a much more diverse set of environments and at a resolution that would be far more difficult to achieve with manual human labeling.

This opens the door for easier comparison of movement data between studies, as different laboratories can use the same models to track body movement across a variety of situations. According to Azim, comparison and reproducibility of experiments are essential in the process of scientific discovery.
“Fluorescent dye markers were the perfect solution,” says first author Daniel Butler, a Salk bioinformatics analyst. Like the invisible ink on a dollar bill that lights up only when you want it to, our fluorescent dye markers can be turned on and off in the blink of an eye, allowing us to generate a massive amount of training data.”
In the future, the team is excited to support diverse applications of GlowTrack and pair its capabilities with other tracking tools that reconstruct movements in three dimensions, and with analysis approaches that can probe these vast movement datasets for patterns.
“Our approach can benefit a host of fields that need more sensitive, reliable, and comprehensive tools to capture and quantify movement,” says Azim. “I am eager to see how other scientists and non-scientists adopt these methods, and what unique, unforeseen applications might arise.”
Other authors include Alexander Keim and Shantanu Ray of Salk.
The work was supported by the UC San Diego CMG Training Program, a Jesse and Caryl Philips Foundation Award, the National Institutes of Health (R00NS088193, DP2NS105555, R01NS111479, RF1NS128898, and U19NS112959), the Searle Scholars Program, the Pew Charitable Trusts, and the McKnight Foundation.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41565-3
DIARIO
Nature Communications
AUTORES
Daniel J. Butler, Alexander P. Keim, Shantanu Ray, Eiman Azim
Oficina de Comunicaciones
Tel.: (858) 453-4100
press@salk.edu
El Instituto Salk es un centro de investigación independiente y sin fines de lucro fundado en 1960 por Jonas Salk, creador de la primera vacuna segura y eficaz contra la poliomielitis. La misión del Instituto es impulsar una investigación fundamental, colaborativa y audaz que aborde los retos más acuciantes de la sociedad, entre ellos el cáncer, la enfermedad de Alzheimer y la vulnerabilidad agrícola. Esta ciencia fundamental sustenta todos los esfuerzos traslacionales, generando conocimientos que permiten el desarrollo de nuevos medicamentos e innovaciones en todo el mundo.