%0 Journal Article %T Review of Sensor Technologies in Animal Breeding: Phenotyping Behaviors of Laying Hens to Select Against Feather Pecking %A Bram Visser %A Britt de Klerk %A Deborah Piette %A Elske N. de Haas %A Janice Siegford %A Jens Tetens %A Jerine A. J. van der Eijk %A J£¿rn Bennewitz %A Lisette E. van der Zande %A Malou van der Sluis %A Michael J. Toscano %A Oleksiy Guzhva %A T. Bas Rodenburg %A Tomas Norton %J Archive of "Animals : an Open Access Journal from MDPI". %D 2019 %R 10.3390/ani9030108 %X The European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) Action GroupHouseNet aims to provide synergy among scientists to prevent damaging behavior in group-housed pigs and laying hens. One goal of this network is to determine how genetic and genomic tools can be used to breed animals that are less likely to perform damaging behavior on their pen-mates. In this review, the focus is on feather-pecking behavior in laying hens. Reducing feather pecking in large groups of hens is a challenge, because it is difficult to identify and monitor individual birds. However, current developments in sensor technologies and animal breeding have the potential to identify individual animals, monitor individual behavior, and link this information back to the underlying genotype. We describe a combination of sensor technologies and ¡°-omics¡± approaches that could be used to select against feather-pecking behavior in laying hens %K damaging behavior %K ultra-wideband %K radio frequency identification %K computer vision %K identification %K measuring behavior %K -omics %K genetic selection %U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6466287/