Iowa State University faculty and staff participate in USPLF Conference

6/27/25

U.S. Precision Livestock Farming Conference logo.

AMES, Iowa -- Iowa State University played a sizable role in the third U.S. Conference on Precision Livestock Farming held in early June in Lincoln, Nebraska. Twelve graduate students and four faculty members from four departments hosted and moderated sessions, and presented on topics throughout the three-day event. In addition, Brett Ramirez, agricultural and biosystems engineering associate professor and ISU extension ag engineer provided leadership for the overall meeting organization by chairing the conference program committee.

Graduate students Mina Shumaly, Andrea Núñez, Xiaohan Jian, Leonora James, Mina Shumaly, Bimala Acharya, Felipe Picchi, Wyatt Kendall, Thinh Tran Pham Tien, Elisa de Conti, Caitlin Sliger and Isaac Berg attended and shared their research. In total 12 posters and oral talks were presented by ISU faculty and students.

Presented works included the following.

From Juan Steibel's lab:

  • Automated gait analysis of growing pigs through biomarker measurements using computer vision, presented by Mina Shumary.
  • Prediction of social genetic effects of Maternal Traits in pigs, presented by Andrea Núñez.
  • Inferring social structure with automatic feeding records in group-housed pigs, presented by Xiaohan Jiang.
  • Open access datasets for implementing computer vision in PLF, presented by Steibel.

From David Rosero's lab:

  • Deep learning-based computer vision for early detection of fall-behind weaned pigs, presented by Bimala Acharya.

From James Koltes' lab:

  • Leveraging milk spectral data for predicting feed intake in lactating Holstein dairy cattle, presented by Leonora James.
  • Assessment of cow behavioral traits as indicators of methane and feed intake measurements in lactating Holstein dairy cows, presented by Koltes.

Faculty members Ramirez, animal science associate professor Koltes, animal science professor Steibel, and electrical and computer engineering associate professor Santosh Pandey moderated sessions. Animal science graduate student Mina Shumaly and ag and biosystems engineering graduate student Felipe Picchi also moderated sessions.

Photo shows ISU animal science faculty and graduate students who participated in USPLF 2025.

Animal science faculty and graduate students who participated in USPLF 2025.

According to the conference website, the USPLF conference aims to bring together scientists, engineers, veterinarians, companies, farmers, policymakers, and associations who are interested in applying technology to improve animal care and well-being. The goal is to highlight state-of-the-art research and groundbreaking innovations while critically evaluating the overall sustainability of our animal systems. As a truly transdisciplinary event, the conference provides an ideal place to share research results and gain inspiration for the future

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IPIC was established in 1994 as a coordinated effort of the colleges of Agriculture (now Agriculture and Life Sciences) and Veterinary Medicine at ISU. Its mission is to promote efficient pork production technologies in Iowa, maintain Iowa's pork industry leadership and strengthen rural development efforts. IPIC focuses its efforts on programs that are integral and complementary to ISU Extension and Outreach. Through IPIC, Iowa producers receive accurate and timely information to make their operations more efficient and profitable.

 

 

Contact

Juan Steibel
Animal science professor
email

 

 

Writer

Sherry Hoyer

Sherry Hoyer.

Communications Specialist
email
 

 

 

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