%0 Journal Article %T Comparison of Vocalization Patterns in Piglets Which Were Crushed to Those Which Underwent Human Restraint %A Donald C. Lay %A Jr. %A Jeffrey R. Lucas %A Kara R. Stewart %A Scott Radcliffe %J Archive of "Animals : an Open Access Journal from MDPI". %D 2018 %R 10.3390/ani8080138 %X Piglet crushing (the process by which a sow sits or lies on and crushes her piglet) is a welfare issue in pig husbandry. In order to understand why crushing occurs, and avoid hardship to a piglet, recordings of distressed piglets are often used to simulate crushing events to measure sowsĄŻ behavior. Unfortunately, it is not known if the call produced by the distressed piglet is similar to a piglet being crushed, making the evaluation of the results difficult. We recorded calls of piglets during crushing and compared the calls to those produced by restrained piglets. When crushed, piglets have a deeper call than piglets which are restrained by a human. Restrained piglets call as loudly as crushed piglets. In conclusion, sufficient differences exist between restrained and crushed piglets that restrained calls alone should not be used to understand the conditions in which a sow will respond to the distress calls of her piglets. Future research should include measuring sow behavior in response to Crushed and Restrained calls %K piglet crushing %K swine vocalization %K sow-piglet communication %U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6115786/