Development of PainFace software to simplify, standardize, and scale up mouse grimace analyses

Author:

McCoy Eric S.12,Park Sang Kyoon3,Patel Rahul P.1,Ryan Dan F.12,Mullen Zachary J.4,Nesbitt Jacob J.4,Lopez Josh E.1,Taylor-Blake Bonnie12,Vanden Kelly A.1,Krantz James L.12,Hu Wenxin12,Garris Rosanna L.12,Snyder Magdalyn G.1,Lima Lucas V.5,Sotocinal Susana G.5,Austin Jean-Sebastien5,Kashlan Adam D.1,Shah Sanya1ORCID,Trocinski Abigail K.1,Pudipeddi Samhitha S.1,Major Rami M.1,Bazick Hannah O.1,Klein Morgan R.1,Mogil Jeffrey S.5,Wu Guorong36,Zylka Mark J.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. UNC Neuroscience Center, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, United States

2. Cell Biology & Physiology and

3. Psychiatry, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, United States

4. Kitware, Inc, Carrboro, NC, United States

5. Departments of Psychology and Anesthesia, Alan Edwards Centre for Research on Pain, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada

6. Department of Computer Science, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, United States

Abstract

Abstract Facial grimacing is used to quantify spontaneous pain in mice and other mammals, but scoring relies on humans with different levels of proficiency. Here, we developed a cloud-based software platform called PainFace (http://painface.net) that uses machine learning to detect 4 facial action units of the mouse grimace scale (orbitals, nose, ears, whiskers) and score facial grimaces of black-coated C57BL/6 male and female mice on a 0 to 8 scale. Platform accuracy was validated in 2 different laboratories, with 3 conditions that evoke grimacing—laparotomy surgery, bilateral hindpaw injection of carrageenan, and intraplantar injection of formalin. PainFace can generate up to 1 grimace score per second from a standard 30 frames/s video, making it possible to quantify facial grimacing over time, and operates at a speed that scales with computing power. By analyzing the frequency distribution of grimace scores, we found that mice spent 7x more time in a “high grimace” state following laparotomy surgery relative to sham surgery controls. Our study shows that PainFace reproducibly quantifies facial grimaces indicative of nonevoked spontaneous pain and enables laboratories to standardize and scale-up facial grimace analyses.

Funder

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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