Research groups are now using computer vision to analyze video of feline and canine posture in shelters. The AI can predict which cats will become stressed in a new environment or which dogs are likely to bite before the human eye detects the warning signs.

For decades, veterinary medicine focused primarily on the physiological: the broken bone, the infected tooth, the elevated kidney value. Treatment was a checklist of symptoms, diagnostics, and pharmaceuticals. Conversely, the study of animal behavior was often viewed as the soft science—the realm of trainers, zoologists, and pet owners with "problem dogs."

Understanding animal behavior is essential in veterinary science for several reasons:

Imagine a future where your veterinarian receives an alert: "Your dog's sleep-to-activity ratio has shifted by 40% over 48 hours, and scratching frequency has tripled." The veterinarian can then proactively treat atopic dermatitis before the dog develops a secondary behavioral problem (e.g., acral lick dermatitis, a compulsive disorder born from physical itch).

Animal behavior and veterinary science are two closely related fields that play a crucial role in understanding and improving the health and well-being of animals. This report provides an overview of the key aspects of animal behavior and its significance in veterinary science.

Veterinary protocols now mandate that any patient presenting with a sudden behavior change—especially aggression, anxiety, or house-soiling—must first receive a full medical workup. Bloodwork, urinalysis, and imaging are the first line of defense, not the last.

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