ABC News
Measurements for the canine-wearer's pulse, heart rate variability, temperature, respiration and activity are recorded and sent to the PetPace cloud in real-time, Asaf Dagan, chief scientist and cofounder of PetPace, the parent company of Animal Alerts, told ABC News. "The idea is that if we can track the behavior and the anxiety levels of animals...and then we use AI and machine learning advanced models to correlate that with geophysical data like earthquakes of different magnitudes," Dagan said. If all of the dogs respond in the same timeframe, the algorithm can likely identify a pattern that an earthquake may be on its way, Dagan said.