Veterinary science now measures physiological markers of behavior. Elevated heart rate, pupil dilation, and even salivary cortisol levels are used to quantify an animal's emotional state. A dog that "snaps out of nowhere" is rarely malicious; more often, it is a dog whose physiological threshold for fear has been crossed due to an underlying painful condition or previous traumatic handling.
Veterinary science has developed pain scales (e.g., the Glasgow Composite Measure Pain Scale) that rely exclusively on behavioral observation. A veterinarian trained in behavior knows that a grimace in a horse (orbital tightening, a tense stare) is equivalent to a human crying in pain. By treating the pain, the abnormal behavior resolves. Many frustrating veterinary cases are solved not by an MRI or a blood panel, but by a meticulous behavioral history. Veterinary science has developed pain scales (e
Keywords: animal behavior, veterinary science, fear-free practice, behavioral medicine, animal pain, canine aggression, feline inappropriate elimination, veterinary ethology. Many frustrating veterinary cases are solved not by
FitBark collars, PetPace, and other biosensors track 24/7 activity, heart rate variability (HRV), and sleep patterns. A sudden drop in night-time activity or a change in HRV is often detectable days before a physical symptom of disease (like limping or vomiting). The wearable becomes a tool for the veterinary behaviorist to correlate environmental changes (a thunderstorm, a new pet) with physiological stress. a new pet) with physiological stress.