Animals In Motion (with answers)

Published

October 9, 2025

Preface

Animals in Motion is an online handbook that introduces free, open-source tools for tracking animal motion from videos and extracting quantitative descriptions of behaviour from motion tracks.

Earlier Versions of this handbook have been taught as hands-on workshops in the following settings:

Whether you are attending a workshop in person, or following along the materials at your own pace, be sure to check out Appendix A — Prerequisites.

All materials are shared under the CC-BY-4.0 license so you are welcome to use and adapt them for your own workshops. There is no need to ask for permission, but we’d love to hear about it if you do! Feedback and contributions to the handbook are always welcome, see Appendix B — Contributing.

Schedule

The workshop on October 8th, 2025, for students of the SWC Systems Neurscience PhD Programme will cover the following chapters of this handbook:

Workshop schedule
Time Topics
Morning 1  Introduction
3  Pose estimation with SLEAP
Afternoon 4  Analysing tracks with movement

Students may also review the following chapters after the workshop, depending on their interests:

Versions

The latest release version is always available at the following URL:

https://animals-in-motion.neuroinformatics.dev/latest/

To view other versions, replace latest in the URL with one of the following version names:

Version Description
dev development version, corresponding to the main branch
v2025.10 pre-release of the version taught as part of the SWC Systems Neurscience PhD Programme in October 2025
v2025.10-answers same as v2025.10 but with answers to exercises
v2025.08 version used during the inaugural Open Software Week in August 2025
v2025.08-answers same as v2025.08 but with answers to exercises

Funding & acknowledgements

The inaugural Open Software Week, which inspired the creation of this handbook, was made possible by a Software Sustainability Institute fellowship to Niko Sirmpilatze, as well as further funding support by the Sainsbury Wellcome Centre, the Society for Research Software Engineering and AIBIO-UK.

We thank the Sainsbury Wellcome Centre and the Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit for providing facilities for the workshops.

Logos of workshop sponsors