• A Presidential Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments was established in 1993 to investigate charges of unethical or criminal action by the experimenters. (thecanadiancharger.com)
  • Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments. (cdc.gov)
  • Chapter 1 focuses on unethical research, showing how wireless radiation infrastructure implementation fits into the Largest Unethical Medical Experiment in Human History framework of unethical medical experimentation, and providing many examples of other types of unethical medical experimentation. (electromagnetichealth.org)
  • As head of Japan's infamous Unit 731 (a covert biological and chemical warfare research and development unit of the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II), Dr. Shiro Ishii (head of medicine) carried out violent human experimentation of tens of thousands during the Second Sino-Japenses War and World War II.Ishii was responsible for testing vivisection techniques without any anesthesia on human prisoners. (pakalertpress.com)
  • PFLC does not accept the idea that the U.S. government can order any human experimentation without valid informed consent. (christianactivities.com)
  • The project involved interviewing researchers and others with firsthand knowledge of either the human radiation experimentation that occurred during the Cold War or the institutional context in which such experimentation took place. (ratical.org)
  • The ethical justification and scientific utility of laboratory animal experimentation are rightly criticized, necessitating efforts to enhance humane aspects of animal research as well as to address biases and difficulties in extrapolating data from animal research to humans. (who.int)
  • The authors also provide four proposals to improve the ability to apply data from laboratory animal experimentation to humans. (who.int)
  • The One Health paradigm, whether applied to zoonotic disease or other health issues affecting both animals and humans, can provide important alternatives to animal experimentation. (who.int)
  • Human Experiments (also known as Beyond the Gate) is a 1979 American horror film directed and co-produced by Gregory Goodell. (wikipedia.org)
  • Human Radiation Experiments: The Department of Energy Roadmap to the Story and the Records (DOE/EH-0445, February 1995). (ratical.org)
  • The experiments will involve inserting human stem cells into rat and mouse embryos. (bigthink.com)
  • Its job was to mix and match the building blocks of standard quantum experiments and find solutions to new problems. (scientificamerican.com)
  • Still, the researchers plan to terminate any experiment if they ever detect that more than 30 percent of the rodent brains are human, per the government's guidelines. (bigthink.com)
  • In late 2013 the researchers spent weeks designing experiments on blackboards and doing the calculations to see if their setups could generate the required quantum states. (scientificamerican.com)
  • The same experiments which provided evidence for social preferences among university students were performed in fifteen small-scale societies exhibiting a wide variety of social, economic and cultural conditions by experienced field researchers who had also done long-term ethnographic field work in these societies. (repec.org)
  • As we've been reporting before , researchers at the University of Geneva are working towards conducting a quantum entanglement experiment that a naked human eye would be able to detect. (medgadget.com)
  • An international team of researchers has conducted a long-term experiment aboard the International Space Station to test the effect of space radiation on mouse embryonic stem cells. (phys.org)
  • The entire human research approval process is entrusted to researchers and their colleagues on the IRB. (ahrp.org)
  • Even well-meaning researchers need to have limits imposed on the level of risk human subjects are exposed to - they should not be granted rubber stamp approval. (ahrp.org)
  • Now more than ever, unsuspecting citizens need to be protected from some overly aggressive researchers whose eyes are on the prize, instead of on the welfare of their human subjects. (ahrp.org)
  • In this study, we evaluated the ability of a scat detection dog to locate feces in comparison with human researchers. (scielo.br)
  • Human researchers and a scat detection dog surveyed for deer (Mazama spp. (scielo.br)
  • The present study aimed to compare the sampling efficiency of a scat detection dog to that of human researchers. (scielo.br)
  • Second, the protocols to be used by researchers should be reviewed by an independent panel before the initiation of the experiment. (ivoryresearch.com)
  • There are also cases of ethical dumping, in which researchers from a country with more stringent requirements for research ethics, for example in experiments involving animal or human subjects, have chosen to place experiments in a country with less stringent requirements. (lu.se)
  • Chapter 2 provides a short historical and a detailed thematic overview of the literature and presents the various research questions which have been studied with computer simulation experiments. (uni-stuttgart.de)
  • Chapter 4 presents experiments on speech segmentation and addresses the question how humans can achieve this faculty based on the available information. (uni-stuttgart.de)
  • The focus of the experiments in chapter 5 is the investigation of acoustic speech recordings in comparison to corresponding articulographic recordings. (uni-stuttgart.de)
  • Preliminary analyses of the data tend to attribute the presence of the noise floor to human respiration and pulse. (cdc.gov)
  • This monograph describes the largest unethical medical experiment in human history: the implementation and operation of non-ionizing non-visible EMF radiation (hereafter called wireless radiation) infrastructure for communications, surveillance, weaponry, and other applications. (electromagnetichealth.org)
  • Most of the reported laboratory experiments that produced these effects are not reflective of the real-life environment in which wireless radiation operates. (electromagnetichealth.org)
  • Many experiments do not include pulsing and modulation of the carrier signal, and most do not account for synergistic effects of other toxic stimuli acting in concert with the wireless radiation. (electromagnetichealth.org)
  • This lack of credible safety testing, combined with depriving the public of the opportunity to provide informed consent, contextualizes the wireless radiation infrastructure operation as an unethical medical experiment. (electromagnetichealth.org)
  • Their findings will contribute to helping scientists better assess the safety and risks related to space radiation for future human space flights. (phys.org)
  • Their experiment results show, for the first time, that the actual biological effect of space radiation is in close agreement with earlier predictions based on the physical measurement of space radiation. (phys.org)
  • Scientists have been conducting intensive studies to measure physical doses of space radiation to better understand its effect on the human body . (phys.org)
  • Our study aims to address the shortcomings of previous ground-based experiments by performing a direct quantitative measurement of the biological effect of space radiation on the International Space Station and comparing this real biological effect with physical estimates in the ground-based experiments," said Takashi Morita, a professor at the Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka Metropolitan University. (phys.org)
  • It was difficult to prepare the experiment and to interpret the results, but we successfully obtained quantitative results related to space radiation, meeting our original objective," said Professor Morita. (phys.org)
  • This year marks the 20th anniversary of the declassification of top-secret studies, the "Human Radiation Experiments," done over a period of 30 years, in which the US conducted radiation experiments on as many as 20,000 vulnerable US citizens. (thecanadiancharger.com)
  • A 1994 Minneapolis StarTribune report, "48 more human radiation experiments revealed," noted psychiatric patients and infants were injected with radioactive iodine. (thecanadiancharger.com)
  • Its findings were published by Oxford University Press in 1996 as The Human Radiation Experiments. (thecanadiancharger.com)
  • Joseph Mangano's 2012 Mad Science: The Nuclear Power Experiment reveals that children were routinely exposed to alarmingly high doses of radiation from devices like "fluoroscopes" to measure foot size in shoe stores. (thecanadiancharger.com)
  • In large-scale experiments as late as 1985, the Energy Department deliberately produced reactor meltdowns that spewed radiation across Idaho and beyond. (thecanadiancharger.com)
  • One such experiment doused Utah with 60 times more radiation than escaped the Three Mile Island accident, according to Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, who released a report on the program 20 years ago. (thecanadiancharger.com)
  • The Pentagon's aboveground nuclear bomb tests of 1945-1962, totaling more than 200, and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, are not officially listed as radiation experiments. (thecanadiancharger.com)
  • As part of this initiative, the Department of Energy undertook an effort to identify and catalog historical documents on radiation experiments that had used human subjects. (ratical.org)
  • The Office of Human Radiation Experiments coordinated the Department's search for records about these experiments. (ratical.org)
  • In September 1994, the Office of Human Radiation Experiments, in collaboration with Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, began an oral history project to fulfill this goal. (ratical.org)
  • 1986. Carcinogenic effects of radiation on the human skin. (cdc.gov)
  • Report on search for human radiation experiment records, 1944-1994 (volume 1). (cdc.gov)
  • Until now, experimental research could not address this question because virtually all subjects had been university students, and while there are cultural differences among student populations throughout the world, these differences are small compared to the full range of human social and cultural environments. (repec.org)
  • They would scream and beg for the research subject to stop while a "scientist" in a white lab coat instructed the research subject to continue, and in videos of the experiment you can see some of the research subjects struggle with how to behave. (npr.org)
  • The research subjects wanted to finish the experiment like they were told. (npr.org)
  • Failure of Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) to protect human subjects. (ahrp.org)
  • NBAC finds that the absence of Federal jurisdiction over much privately funded research means that the U.S. government cannot know how many Americans currently are subjects in experiments, cannot influence how they have been recruited, cannot ensure that research subjects know and understand the risks they are undertaking, and cannot ascertain whether they have been harmed. (ahrp.org)
  • Most of the subjects who were used in the experiment died or were crippled as a result. (ivoryresearch.com)
  • The phenomenal growth of global pharmaceutical sales and the quest for innovation are driving an unprecedented search for human test subjects, particularly in middle- and low-income countries. (princeton.edu)
  • A U-shaped cluster of bunkers was discovered five feet below the surface, as well as a circular room that archaeologists believe was used to observe and dissect human subjects after they were infected with pathogens or chemical agents. (yahoo.com)
  • The human subjects were mostly poisoned without their knowledge or consent. (thecanadiancharger.com)
  • When experiments travel : clinical trials and the global search for human subjects / Adriana Petryna. (who.int)
  • A vast amount of ethnographic and historical research suggests that people's motives are influenced by economic, social, and cultural environments, yet such methods can only yield circumstantial evidence about human motives. (repec.org)
  • Foundations of Human Sociality: Economic Experiments and Ethnographic Evidence from Fifteen Small-Scale Societies ," OUP Catalogue , Oxford University Press, number 9780199262052. (repec.org)
  • Human Capital Investment under Exit Options: Evidence from a Natural Quasi-Experiment ," Working Papers 152, Center for Global Development, revised Feb 2019. (repec.org)
  • Human capital investment under exit options: Evidence from a natural quasi-experiment ," Journal of Development Economics , Elsevier, vol. 163(C). (repec.org)
  • Human Capital Investment under Exit Options: Evidence from a Natural Quasi-Experiment ," IZA Discussion Papers 12173, Institute of Labor Economics (IZA). (repec.org)
  • Evidence indicates that this fatal gene experiment is not unique and may be the tip of an iceberg. (ahrp.org)
  • The next great idea in publishing - one supported by evidence - is an experiment away. (niemanlab.org)
  • Most of the surface-level buildings at the Anda site were destroyed in 1945 to erase evidence of the experiments, but the underground structures remain, archaeologists said. (yahoo.com)
  • entitled "One health: perspectives on ethical issues and evidence from animal experiments" [1], touches on a number of important points, but fails to go far enough in exploring the innovative nature of a One Health approach to a number of scientific and ethical issues related to the overlap of human and animal health. (who.int)
  • Our article focuses on One Health in relation to ethics and a pathway to generating robust evidence from animal experiments and certainly not, as seems to be understood by Dr Lederman, that One Health provides an alternative to the conventional animal experiments. (who.int)
  • Evidence: Many systematic reviews published in the Cochrane library are inconclusive and unable to provide clinical recommendations after randomized controlled trials have been undertaken based on the results of animal experiments. (who.int)
  • The Japanese government plans to let a stem cell researcher conduct human-animal embryo experiments, with the ultimate goal of someday creating organs to be transplanted into humans. (bigthink.com)
  • Nakauchi hopes to eventually conduct similar experiments involving pigs, but that will require additional government approval, too. (bigthink.com)
  • They will conduct tiny controlled experiments where there is no shame in failure, and constantly ask, "What did we learn? (niemanlab.org)
  • Archaeologists found a bunker used by WWII Japanese scientists to conduct human experiments, says a report. (yahoo.com)
  • Chinese archaeologists have discovered an underground 'horror bunker' used by Japanese scientists to conduct brutal experiments on humans before and during World War II, the South China Morning Post reported. (yahoo.com)
  • An April 17, 1947 memo by Col OG Haywood of the Army Corps of Engineers, reported by The Washington Post on Dec. 16, 1994, explained why the studies were classified: "It is desired that no document be released which refers to experiments with humans and might have adverse effect on public opinion or result in legal suits. (thecanadiancharger.com)
  • Throughout most of the experiments, scientists had not yet identified the distinct hepatitis viruses. (cdc.gov)
  • To understand how social rules affect the interactions between humans and machines, scientists re-created a famous psychology experiment using robots. (npr.org)
  • One hundred and fifty animal-human hybrid embryos have been produced by mad scientists in the UK - with full government approval - under the 2008 Human Fertilisation Embryology Act . (wariscrime.com)
  • The UK's Daily Mail newspaper is reporting that a committee of scientists recently blew the whistle on the operation and expressed alarm over the possibility of the experiments going "too far" and resulting in a real Planet of the Apes scenario, where animals escape from the lab and begin reproducing in the wild. (wariscrime.com)
  • It's actually just an extension of science fact: human-animal hybrids have been produced by these UK scientists for the last three years . (wariscrime.com)
  • Furthermore, the closer the genetic code of the animals to humans, the more likely the embryos would be viable, so it seems likely that these mad scientists would have been using eggs from monkeys or apes combined with humans. (wariscrime.com)
  • But now the mad scientists are playing around with half human embryos that could theoretically be used to grow ape men which are half ape and half human. (wariscrime.com)
  • Although you might expect such activities to be taking place in nations like North Korea or China, where the black market harvesting of human organs is an everyday event, few people expect UK scientists to engage in such "Island of Dr. Moreau" types of scientific treachery. (wariscrime.com)
  • Japanese scientists exposed prisoners to pathogens and dissected them to learn about the effects on the human body. (yahoo.com)
  • In 1996, he arranged a series of experiments testing whether people observe the rule of reciprocity with machines. (npr.org)
  • A controlled experiment was used to assess the maximum effective perpendicular distance from a transect search line that the dog could detect a Mazama spp fecal sample. (scielo.br)
  • The newsrooms that win in 2019 will be in search of better experiments to test. (niemanlab.org)
  • We propose a detection scheme that involves lossy threshold detectors (such as human eye) on the amplified side and conventional photon detectors on the other side. (medgadget.com)
  • In the latter, some experimental briefs have revolved around particular more-than-human challenges aimed at provoking a crisis in conventional methods and means of design and speculating what architectural practice might turn into if it re-learned its ways from a variety of agents who are usually not taken into account. (unina.it)
  • When Experiments Travel challenges conventional understandings of the ethics and politics of transnational science and changes the way we think about global medicine and the new infrastructures of our lives. (princeton.edu)
  • Many people have studied machine-human relations, and at this point it's clear that without realizing it, we often treat the machines around us like social beings. (npr.org)
  • NaturalNews has documented a partial history of "scientific" medical experiments on human beings that shows the shocking depths of this horrifying branch of so-called "science. (wariscrime.com)
  • The study focuses on ethical considerations that should be made when conducting research trials that involve human beings. (ivoryresearch.com)
  • The experiment is looking at six individuals with Hunter syndrome, a condition caused by a lack of a gene that makes an enzyme needed to break down complex sugar molecules. (newsweek.com)
  • Grown an even deeper sense of admiration for the human design system and gene keys system- segmenting their position in my mind as one of the greatest tools for not only self-awakening, shadow work, and self-healing but the most practical and tactical system that integrates strategically and seamlessly into the realm of business, marketing and sales. (kiaramaree.co)
  • In Month #14 to #15 I dived deeper into my Gene Keys, which is a sister system to Human Design and relates to the 64 gates. (kiaramaree.co)
  • The first issue that Helsinki declaration addressed, as stipulated in the article, is to ensure such trials are based on results from the laboratory and experiments on animals. (ivoryresearch.com)
  • The data described here was funded in whole or in part by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, of the National Institutes of Health under award number U19AI106772 and is a contribution of the "Modeling Host Responses to Understand Severe Human Virus Infections" Project at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. (pnnl.gov)
  • In March, Japan overturned a ban on growing human cells inside animal embryos for more than 14 days. (bigthink.com)
  • At that level, an animal with a human face will never be born. (bigthink.com)
  • The current experiments are designed to test the limits of growing human cells inside animal embryos. (bigthink.com)
  • Among the monstrosities they created were animal eggs fertilized with human sperm , and cybrids - animal cells that are injected with human cell nuclei. (wariscrime.com)
  • They also created chimeras , a mixture of human cells and animal cells, much like what happened in the sci-fi Planet of the Apes depiction of science gone wrong. (wariscrime.com)
  • Three laboratories in the UK were granted government licenses to play God with these human-animal embryos: King's College London, Newcastle University and Warwick University. (wariscrime.com)
  • Given the risks - such as toxicity and animal deaths in prior experiments - this experiment should not have been approved by the IRB. (ahrp.org)
  • This experiment clearly demonstrates why we need a National Human Subject Protection Act - with enforcement mechanisms such as are provided under the Animal Welfare Act of 1966. (ahrp.org)
  • Results in animal models were frequently equivocal, or inconsistent with human outcomes. (safermedicines.org)
  • Results of animal and human experiments are summarized. (cdc.gov)
  • Zoonoses are important threats to human and animal health, and animal research has played a role in assessing risk across species. (who.int)
  • One Health is a comparative clinical approach which promotes better collaboration between human and animal health professionals in order to reduce the spread of zoonotic diseases. (who.int)
  • Rabinowitz P, Scotch M, Conti L. Human and animal sentinels for shared health risks. (who.int)
  • Spontaneous animal homologues of human autoimmune blistering diseases have been identified in the last 2 decades. (medscape.com)
  • So basically, he was giving unnecessary surgery to prisoners by opening them all the way up, keeping them alive and not using any anesthetic.For a disturbing video about vivisection, please go here .During these experiments he would also force pregnant women to abort their babies. (pakalertpress.com)
  • Stem cell biologist Hiromitsu Nakauchi plans to grow a small amount of human cells inside rat and mouse embryos - both of which will be altered so the animals can't produce a pancreas - for about 15 days. (bigthink.com)
  • But some bioethicists are concerned that introducing human cells into other species' embryos could cause problems. (bigthink.com)
  • The findings of these experiments demonstrated that no society in which experimental behaviour is consistent with the canonical model of self-interest. (repec.org)
  • The findings contribute to reducing uncertainties in risk assessments of human space flights. (phys.org)
  • The histopathologic and immunopathologic findings usually are the same as that of human diseases and are not discussed here. (medscape.com)
  • The cells that come from humans are known as induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS), which are derived from skin or blood cells and reprogrammed to revert to an embryonic-like state. (bigthink.com)
  • The number of human cells grown in the bodies of sheep is extremely small, like one in thousands or one in tens of thousands," he told The Asahi Shimbun . (bigthink.com)
  • For future work, we are considering using human embryonic stem cells rather than mouse embryonic stem cells given that the human cells are much better suited for human risk assessment, and it is easier to analyze chromosome aberrations," said Professor Morita. (phys.org)
  • What they really mean is that they would raise a secret lab full of half-human apes imprisoned in cages, then harvest their cells and sell them off to pharmaceutical companies which turn around and offer them to patients at a hundred thousand dollars per treatment. (wariscrime.com)
  • The implementation of human pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) in cell therapy has an extraordinary potential but faces many practical challenges, including costs associated with growth media and factors. (authorea.com)
  • The purpose of this experiment was to evaluate the human patient peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) response to Zaire Ebola Makona virus infection during the 2013-2016 epidemic in West Africa. (pnnl.gov)
  • The equipment used in this experiment is for educational purposes only and should not be used to diagnose medical conditions. (vernier.com)
  • It is unethical because it violates the key ethical medical experiment requirement for "informed consent" by the overwhelming majority of the participants. (electromagnetichealth.org)
  • Appendix 1 presents more details about unethical medical experiments, including examples and many references for further study. (electromagnetichealth.org)
  • It was also rumored that along with the soldiers, patients at VA hospitals were being used as guinea pigs for medical experiments involving bio-warfare chemicals, but that all experiments were changed to be known as "observations" to ward off suspicions. (pakalertpress.com)
  • As another striking example, Dr. Jonas Salk, the famous developer of the polio vaccine, was actually a medical criminal who conducted illegal medical experiments on mental patients without their consent . (wariscrime.com)
  • The article mentions the declaration of Helsinki and directives that were drawn to direct medical doctors when conducting trials on humans. (ivoryresearch.com)
  • In 1964, the World Medical Association drafted guidelines that were to act as guiding principles to medical doctors conducting trials on humans (Mandal, Acharya & Parija, 2011). (ivoryresearch.com)
  • While these experiments often provide those in need with vital and previously unattainable medical resources, the outsourcing and offshoring of trials also create new problems. (princeton.edu)
  • Moving between corporate and scientific offices in the United States and research and public health sites in Poland and Brazil, When Experiments Travel documents the complex ways that commercial medical science, with all its benefits and risks, is being integrated into local health systems and emerging drug markets. (princeton.edu)
  • Empirically rich and theoretically innovative, the book shows that neither the language of coercion nor that of rational choice fully captures the range of situations and value systems at work in medical experiments today. (princeton.edu)
  • Eileen Welsome's 1999 exposé The Plutonium Files: America's Secret Medical Experiments in the Cold War details "the unspeakable scientific trials that reduced thousands of men, women, and even children to nameless specimens. (thecanadiancharger.com)
  • Early results from the first experiment to do this in the human genome are now showing promising preliminary results for treating a rare disorder. (newsweek.com)
  • Through the new CDC Human Genomics and Public Health Initiative's support, we will expand from sequencing small viral genomes to sequencing sections of the much larger human genome, the genes involved in this mechanism. (cdc.gov)
  • In order to understand the human body, it is important to have a basic understanding of its anatomy, physiology, major ailments, and healthy lifestyles. (infobasepublishing.com)
  • Covering such diverse topics as bone anatomy, stomach structure, respiratory analysis, how kidneys work, and blood flow, this new resource features 20 experiments that help hold middle and high school students' attention while explaining science concepts. (infobasepublishing.com)
  • The experiment sheds light on the pitfalls of inadequately regulated human research, demonstrating how the absence of an enforcement mechanism - no advisory committee, under the auspices of NIH (such as RAC), has adequate authority to protect unsuspecting, patients from experiments that cause them needless harm. (ahrp.org)
  • And do these experiments help or harm public health in the countries where they are conducted? (princeton.edu)
  • In the absence of independent monitoring and oversight, or mandatory reporting of serious adverse incidents, no authorized agency maintains a record of human casualties of research. (ahrp.org)
  • Providing a unique perspective on globalized clinical trials, When Experiments Travel raises central questions: Are such trials exploitative or are they social goods? (princeton.edu)
  • Obama administration officials wondering what to expect from this brewing storm should consult Adriana Petryna's new book When Experiments Travel , which deals with the global clinical trials industry, especially in low-income and middle-income countries. (princeton.edu)
  • When Experiments Travel is a provocative look inside the outsourcing of clinical trials. (princeton.edu)
  • Michelson-Morley experiment, was aimed to detect earth's motion with respect to the ether and it was performed on the surface of the earth. (researchgate.net)
  • This Statement was prepared to give you information about Stoddard solvent and to emphasize the human health effects that may result from exposure to it. (cdc.gov)
  • This information is important for you to know because Stoddard solvent may cause harmful health effects and because these sites are potential or actual sources of human exposure to Stoddard solvent. (cdc.gov)
  • Combining ethnographic and experimental approaches to fill this gap, this book breaks new ground in reporting the results of a large cross-cultural study aimed at determining the sources of social (non-selfish) preferences that underlie the diversity of human sociality. (repec.org)
  • In recent years, an experimental agenda has developed at the crossroads of architecture and STS, which has stimulated interesting experiments aimed at exploring different versions of architecture and its political dimension, both by a number of architects in their professional practice and in pedagogical spaces. (unina.it)
  • The experimental factors of an experiment are the variables you are studying in the experiment. (lu.se)
  • Since you probably have lots of annotations on your items that are not relevant for the experiment you must select the annotations types that should make up the experimental factors of the experiment. (lu.se)
  • He then recalled that during the Fifty-eighth World Health Assembly, the ministers of health from the African Region presented a common position regarding the issues of maternal and newborn health, HIV/AIDS, human resource development, and health care financing. (who.int)
  • Passive transfer experiments have demonstrated that purified autoantibodies from patients with the pemphigus group of diseases can induce blister formation when delivered to newborn mice. (medscape.com)
  • It's with no small amount of pride that I can now reveal my second, and most successful, human hybrid experiment. (webomator.com)
  • The raw bioassays you want to analyze in this experiment. (lu.se)
  • To ensure that the project remained funded, Cameron, in one scheme, took his experiments upon admitted children and in one situation had the child engage in sex with high-ranking government officials and film it. (pakalertpress.com)
  • In particular, these experiences inspired the author, together with Dr. Tomás Sánchez Criado, Senior Researcher at the Chair of Urban Anthropology, Institut für Europäische Ethnologie of the Humboldt-Universität in Berlin, to engage in a joint auto-pedagogical experiment with the aim of exploring what neurodiversity can teach architecture. (unina.it)
  • Here we demonstrate, through acoustic analyses of over 3000 human vocalizations and four perceptual experiments, that vocalizers produce low frequencies when attempting to sound large, but loudness is prioritized for displays of strength and aggression. (lu.se)
  • They will increase their volume of experiments, doing them fast and often. (niemanlab.org)
  • Samples were obtained from whole blood collections from human patients in 2015 who were naturally infected with Ebola virus during the West African Ebola virus epidemic and healthy individuals (6 month collections) where resulting blood serum was processed for proteome, metabolome, and lipidome expression analysis. (pnnl.gov)
  • As VSPB was doing some immunological experiments with the Ebola virus, we came across a curious finding that led to the idea for a new pilot project as part of the recently launched CDC human genomics and public health initiative . (cdc.gov)
  • VSPB staff were intrigued when experiments showed that blood samples from some people who had not been vaccinated against Ebola or infected by it were able to interfere with the virus in ways that we would only expect from samples from vaccinees or survivors of Ebola. (cdc.gov)
  • The ultimate goal is to grow organs inside animals that could be transplanted into humans. (bigthink.com)
  • We don't expect to create human organs immediately, but this allows us to advance our research based upon the know-how we have gained up to this point. (bigthink.com)
  • PFLC will be issuing an opinion letter to be submitted to President Bush and the FDA and will be organizing a petition drive to stop the FDA from implementing Nazi-like experiments on our citizens. (christianactivities.com)
  • A demented prison doctor performs gruesome shock therapy experiments on inmates. (uwatchfree.world)
  • So in my breakdown came my breakthrough and the Human Design in Business experiment was officially born. (kiaramaree.co)
  • Approaching zoonotic and environmental risks from a One Health perspective involves considering what research and disease control and prevention methods are mutually beneficial to humans, animals and the environment. (who.int)
  • Most of such trials are carried out by developed countries, using human experiments in developing nations. (ivoryresearch.com)
  • The paper will focus on a Cambodian case, which included over 900 women used as trials in the experiment. (ivoryresearch.com)
  • Trials feared for their lives as this is against the regulations on trials that involve human experiments. (ivoryresearch.com)
  • Trials that involve the use of humans as experiments are sensitive in the society, making it necessary to follow ethical standards. (ivoryresearch.com)
  • The origin of human language seems completely inaccessible to empirical inquiry. (uni-stuttgart.de)
  • Computer simulation experiments can not only complement laborious empirical studies and replace them to some extent. (uni-stuttgart.de)
  • The regulation binds all research conducting institutions to have empirical results conducted on animals before consideration to use humans. (ivoryresearch.com)
  • On human capital formation with exit options: comment and new results ," Journal of Population Economics , Springer;European Society for Population Economics, vol. 21(3), pages 679-684, July. (repec.org)
  • On Human Capital Formation with Exit Options: Comment and New Results ," IZA Discussion Papers 1903, Institute of Labor Economics (IZA). (repec.org)
  • On Human Capital Formation with Exit Options: Comment and New Results ," CESifo Working Paper Series 1648, CESifo. (repec.org)
  • On human capital formation with exit options: Comment and new results ," Munich Reprints in Economics 19803, University of Munich, Department of Economics. (repec.org)
  • Since then, other teams have started performing the experiments identified by MELVIN, allowing them to test the conceptual underpinnings of quantum mechanics in new ways. (scientificamerican.com)
  • The trial aims to test the efficacy of the HIV preventative drug applied during the experiment. (ivoryresearch.com)
  • Learn to design great experiments you can test with humans . (niemanlab.org)
  • What motives underlie the ways humans interact socially? (repec.org)
  • and (b) faster agents can lead to market fragmentation, such that markets transition from a regime where humans and agents freely interact, to a regime where agents are more likely to trade between themselves - a result that has also been observed in real financial markets. (bris.ac.uk)
  • A design of experiments (DoE) was used to investigate the interaction between these three variables during the spontaneous differentiation of hiPSCs. (authorea.com)
  • Literally hundreds of experiments suggest that people care not only about their own material payoffs, but also about such things as fairness, equity and reciprocity. (repec.org)
  • The notorious unit experimented on and killed thousands of people, including men, women, and children. (yahoo.com)
  • At least 3,000 people, including Chinese civilians, Russians, Mongolians and Koreans, were killed in tests of biological weapons and other experiments by Unit 731 between 1939 and 1945, Chinese state media say. (yahoo.com)
  • The second part of this thesis presents a series of my own computer simulation experiments and discusses relevant work. (uni-stuttgart.de)
  • To understand the impact of high frequency trading (HFT) systems on financial market dynamics, a series of controlled real-time experiments involving humans and automated trading agents were performed. (bris.ac.uk)
  • In a series of randomized experiments, students participated in remedial tutorials conducted during school hours in small groups. (uwpress.org)
  • Furthermore, anti-BP180 autoantibodies from patients affected with BP are capable of inducing dermal-epidermal separation in cryosections of normal human skin, further supporting the pathogenic role of BP180. (medscape.com)
  • We emphasize the importance of the detection loophole in Bell violation experiments by giving a simple preparation technique for separable states that violate a Bell inequality without closing this loophole. (medgadget.com)
  • However their detection efficiency in relation to human observers has rarely been evaluated. (scielo.br)
  • The detection success from our surveys in the Atlantic forest was zero for humans and 0.15 samples/ha or 0.20 samples/km walked for the dog team. (scielo.br)
  • There is a need to examine the ethical issues that are involved when conducting such experiments. (ivoryresearch.com)
  • Bartneck studies human-robot relations, and he wanted to know what would happen if a robot in a similar position to the "learner" begged for its life. (npr.org)
  • These issues are further problematised through the lens of Science and Technology Studies (STS), and Actor Network Theory (ANT) in particular, whose contribution lies, first of all, in suggesting a more-than-human perspective, capable of further complexifying the meaning of participation and the "parts" involved. (unina.it)
  • Aspartame is one of the most studied food additives in the human food supply," FDA officials said in a statement , adding that the agency found "significant shortcomings" in the studies the WHO used to justify the new classification. (medscape.com)
  • When combined with the right virological experiments, human genomic studies have the potential to show us the precise mechanisms involved in such interactions. (cdc.gov)
  • The idea that research can be performed on a human being without informed consent is antithetical to the very meaning of human self-determination and dignity. (christianactivities.com)
  • While our Nation long ago lost much of its respect for preborn children, we attempted to hold on to the principles of informed consent and human dignity for adults. (christianactivities.com)
  • Enforcing the concept of informed consent as against the government is as important as any other human rights battle that has been fought in the past. (christianactivities.com)
  • One day doctors hope to change that by going inside the human body to edit out disorders from human DNA. (newsweek.com)
  • Salistick detects pregnancy by identifying a hormone called human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG), which is present in the body of a pregnant person. (medicaldaily.com)
  • The human body is a complicated machine-from the brain to reproduction to the five senses. (infobasepublishing.com)
  • Human Body Experiments is closely aligned with the National Science Education Standards and will get students excited about learning. (infobasepublishing.com)
  • Message Body (Your Name) thought you would like to see the Journal of Human Resources web site. (uwpress.org)
  • The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) strongly disagreed with the WHO's position and is sticking by its recommended daily limit of 50 mg/kg of body weight - equivalent to 75 packets of the sweetener Equal - as safe for human consumption. (medscape.com)
  • The Times Open Team , BBC News Labs , and NPR's Hypothesis-Driven Design playbook are fine examples of large organizations creating space to exploit the power of experiments. (niemanlab.org)
  • I needed to grow my business the way the divine designed me, in alignment to my human design. (kiaramaree.co)
  • I felt called to deepen my experiment by bringing greater awareness and attention to how my business' human design chart worked in relationship with my own personal chart. (kiaramaree.co)
  • Our businesses are separate energetic entities to us with their own human design chart, strengths and mission. (kiaramaree.co)
  • An explanation of the experiment design. (lu.se)
  • Dr. Sydney Halpern tackles these fundamental questions in Dangerous Medicine: The Story Behind Human Experiments with Hepatitis , as she tells the compelling and largely hidden story of the hepatitis experiments that took place in the United States during World War II and most of the Cold War ( Figure ). (cdc.gov)