I agree that animal research is absolutely necessary. If it weren't for a few 
calves in Houston, my daughter wouldn't be alive. I have conducted different 
types of surgery on rats, given rats various drugs, conditioned rats and 
pigeons, and worked with rabbits. The operant work is fairly benign (a bit of 
food or water deprivation), but the cat research to which I was referring is 
something that I could not do, and don't even like to read about. A 
single-electrode recording requires a sedated but conscious animal (cat, 
primate, whatever). Some of the tests are brutal. For example, studying 
nystagmus in cats by bolting their heads to a turn table (NOT something I could 
do). I believe strongly in animal research, but I also believe that watchdog 
groups are essential in making sure we, as scientists, police ourselves and 
don't engage in unnecessary or unjustified research. I used to have an article 
(I think I still have it in my office but I don't recall the name of the 
article or the author) in which the author reflected on his role in animal 
research. It was interesting because he started with worms in a blender, then 
moved up the scale--frogs, mice, rats, rabbits (my memory is fuzzy, so this is 
just my recollection). The moral questions were intriguing. Although I do 
believe strongly in animal research, I just can't do it any more.
Carol


Carol L. DeVolder, Ph.D. 
Professor of Psychology
Chair, Department of Psychology 
St. Ambrose University 
518 West Locust Street 
Davenport, Iowa 52803 

Phone: 563-333-6482 
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
web: http://web.sau.edu/psychology/psychfaculty/cdevolder.htm 

The contents of this message are confidential and may not be shared with anyone 
without permission of the sender.



-----Original Message-----
From: Dennis Goff [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sun 8/17/2008 8:11 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: RE: [tips] Cats in psychological research
 
Claudia,

You comments exactly captured my thinking about the subject of using animals in 
our research. 

Thanks
Dennis


-----Original Message-----
From: Claudia Stanny [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sat 8/16/2008 6:09 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: RE: [tips] Cats in psychological research
 
Joan comments:
 
Jeez!  My main reaction to these posts is "poor kittie cats!"


I have many recollections from graduate school of sharing the elevator with a 
lab cat and a graduate researcher. The cat was being escorted from the cat 
colony on one floor to the vision lab on another floor. The cat and grad 
student would walk onto the elevator side-by-side, get off together at the 
appropriate floor, and walk together down the hall to the lab. I've seen videos 
of cats in this lab leaping up into their operant box to begin data collection. 
In this lab, the cats were trained psychophysical observers. When they made the 
correct choice in a sensory discrimination task, they were rewarded with a 
dollop of pureed meat (fresh from the Gerber's jar). The cats went to "work" 
with their tails erect and their ears perked. They were great fun to watch.

I know that not all research involving cats has such a benign face. My husband 
did a post-doc in which he did single unit recordings of auditory cells in the 
cat. As with the Hubel and Weisel work, the recordings must be followed by a 
histological study of the location and type of cells that gave rise to the 
recording. My husband would come home from a long night at the lab at apologize 
to our cat (the data collection always continued as long as possible - 
frequently all night long and into the next day - to ensure that the maximum 
amount of data can be gathered from each cat, who gives its life for the 
research). Our understanding of vision and audition is founded on these 
studies. There is a great cost to the animals. But would you give up the 
medical advances in the treatment of hearing and vision loss that has been 
possible because of this work?

And before we begin beating the drums of speciesism, remember that this 
research also has veterinary consequences. The dog lab at my graduate school 
was involved in the research associated with the development of all those 
reduced-calorie chows we buy for our overweight animals (while also learning 
some important things about basic mechanisms of taste perception).

I love my cats as much as anybody (and am mourning the loss of my 20-year old 
feline buddy). But we need to remember to weigh the benefits as well as the 
costs associated with research that produces pain or harm to animal subjects. 
If we only focus on the consequences for the animals, we do the researchers and 
the discipline a disservice.

Claudia Stanny



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