Collage with photos of a foal and an adult horse with a rider, both against a white background.
RESEARCH PROJECT

As time goes by: Monitoring of motion symmetry in young horses during training

Updated: October 2025

Project overview

Project manager: Marie Rhodin
Contact: Marie Rhodin

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Short summary

Researchers have noted that many horses that train and compete move with an asymmetric movement pattern. Today, we do not know whether such asymmetries are pain-triggered and caused by the exercise or if they can be a natural variation.

The collaboration project aims to initiate three longitudinal studies where changes in the movement pattern are observed over a two-year time period in riding and trotting horses. There will be two different groups of horses for which we will study the occurrence and degree of asymmetries: young horses that have not been trained and riding horses that compete on an elite level.

This is a unique opportunity to study and gather important knowledge about when asymmetries occur and how they develop over time. If horses can have a mild asymmetry that does not change over time with different types of exercise, it may indicate that it is more of a natural variation than lameness.

Finally, this research can also give us important background information for future training studies where one would want to identify risk factors that contribute to equine pathologies.

Collaborations

This research project is a collaborative project with the Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU).

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