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Automation is moving from trade-show novelty to everyday tool, and poultry is finally seeing the payoff. In this episode, Andy Vance talks with Georgia Tech’s Colin Usher about what practical robotics and sensing actually look like inside commercial houses, where floors are dusty, birds are curious, and decisions must be made in real time. The conversation focuses on systems that create value now, including platforms that reduce floor eggs, improve mortality collection, and capture continuous data on flock distribution, behavior, and uniformity.
They explore how computer vision and on-bird, in-house sensing can turn thousands of small observations into better ventilation, lighting, and nutrition decisions, and why the most successful solutions start with barn realities rather than lab ideals. Colin explains the cost curve for hardware and processing, the importance of human-in-the-loop oversight, and how a steady stream of quantitative data can tighten feedback loops from brooding to processing. If you want a clear picture of how automation can improve welfare, labor efficiency, and margins without disrupting daily routines, this episode brings the tech down to the litter line.
CREDITS
LEGAL
By The Poultry Science Association5
22 ratings
Automation is moving from trade-show novelty to everyday tool, and poultry is finally seeing the payoff. In this episode, Andy Vance talks with Georgia Tech’s Colin Usher about what practical robotics and sensing actually look like inside commercial houses, where floors are dusty, birds are curious, and decisions must be made in real time. The conversation focuses on systems that create value now, including platforms that reduce floor eggs, improve mortality collection, and capture continuous data on flock distribution, behavior, and uniformity.
They explore how computer vision and on-bird, in-house sensing can turn thousands of small observations into better ventilation, lighting, and nutrition decisions, and why the most successful solutions start with barn realities rather than lab ideals. Colin explains the cost curve for hardware and processing, the importance of human-in-the-loop oversight, and how a steady stream of quantitative data can tighten feedback loops from brooding to processing. If you want a clear picture of how automation can improve welfare, labor efficiency, and margins without disrupting daily routines, this episode brings the tech down to the litter line.
CREDITS
LEGAL

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