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Openness about animal research increases public support
Science engagement can be a daunting prospect. This is especially true for scientists whose work involves animal models, and particularly nonhuman primates. Here, we show that openly explaining our rationale for our neuroscience work involving nonhuman primates — and the legal and ethical regulation...
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Published in: | Nature neuroscience 2022-04, Vol.25 (4), p.401-403 |
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container_title | Nature neuroscience |
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creator | Mendez, Juan Carlos Perry, Brook A. L. Heppenstall, Rhyanne J. Mason, Stuart Mitchell, Anna S. |
description | Science engagement can be a daunting prospect. This is especially true for scientists whose work involves animal models, and particularly nonhuman primates. Here, we show that openly explaining our rationale for our neuroscience work involving nonhuman primates — and the legal and ethical regulations that govern animal experimentation — increased public support and understanding, which is crucial for this essential research to continue. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1038/s41593-022-01039-z |
format | article |
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subjects | 631/1647/1453/2205 631/378/1595/2167 631/378/2649/1409 631/477 706/648/453 Animal Experimentation Animal Genetics and Genomics Animal models Animals Behavioral Sciences Biological Techniques Biomedical and Life Sciences Biomedicine Comment Experimentation Nervous system Neurobiology Neurosciences Personality Primates |
title | Openness about animal research increases public support |
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