The Defender Children’s Health Defense News and Views
Close menu
Close menu

You must be a CHD Insider to save this article Sign Up

Already an Insider? Log in

February 9, 2023 Big Tech News

Big Tech

380+ Scientists: NIH-Funded Experiments on Monkeys ‘Cruel’ and ‘Unethical’

Primatologist Jane Goodall joined more than 380 scientists who on Wednesday urged the National Institutes of Health to review and end funding for “cruel experiments” on macaque monkeys, some of which involve implanting electrodes in the animals’ brains.

nih monkey experiments feature

Image credit: Margaret S. Livingstone, Triggers for Mother Love, 119 PNAS (2022), CC BY-NC-ND

By Brett Wilkins

Hundreds of scientists, doctors and academics from around the world — including renowned primatologist Jane Goodall — on Wednesday urged the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to review and ultimately end funding for “cruel experiments” on non-human primates at Harvard University.

In a letter led by Harvard Law School’s Animal Law & Policy Clinic and the Wild Minds Lab at the University of St. Andrews School of Psychology and Neuroscience in the U.K., 380 signatories urge senior National Institutes of Health officials to “review the protocols and justifications” related to the “funding of unethical experiments on macaque monkeys and other non-human primates taking place at Harvard Medical School.”

As the letter details:

“An NIH-funded Harvard Medical School lab run by neurobiologist Dr. Margaret S. Livingstone has used infant macaque monkeys to study visual recognition by depriving them of the ability to see faces, either by sewing their eyes shut or by requiring staff to wear welders’ masks around them. In some cases, the lab implants electrode arrays into the monkeys’ brains.

“By design, these experiments require maternal deprivation — a fact that drew the ire of scientists last fall, when Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) published an Inaugural Article by Dr. Livingstone entitled Triggers for Mother Love. The article describes the lab’s practice of taking infant macaques from their mothers shortly after birth and attempting to appease the mothers’ distress by giving them plush toys as “surrogate infants.”

“As a primatologist with decades of experience in the field, I can say with complete confidence that we know that infant primates and their mothers suffer greatly when they are separated. We also know that depriving infants of the ability to see faces will have adverse impacts on their brain and eye development,” Richard Wrangham, an anthropologist and primatologist at Harvard, said in a statement.

“Taking infant monkeys from their mothers to use in invasive brain experiments could only be justified by expectations of extraordinarily important benefits for the monkeys themselves, or for humans,” he added. “Because that high ethical bar has not been met, I see no legitimate need for any such research.”

Catherine Hobaiter, the principal investigator at Wild Minds Lab, asserted that “these studies fail on both scientific and ethical grounds.”

“The doublethink argument that maternally separated individuals represent appropriate models for conditions such as anxiety, while arguing these methods do not cause significant distress, is fundamentally flawed,” she said.

“Our fundamental role as scientists is to update, refine, and redefine our understanding of the world around us. Doing so must include not only our theoretical positions, but our ethical responsibility to the animals we have given no choice in becoming our subjects of study.”

Gal Badihi, a graduate research student at Wild Minds Lab, argued that “as long as non-human primates are used in scientific experiments, we are morally obligated to provide them with sufficient social conditions that ensure their emotional well-being.”

“This is not only an ethical requirement,” Badihi added, “but essential for research validity and integrity.”

Originally published by Common Dreams.

Brett Wilkins is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

Share Options

Add to Google
Suggest A Correction
Close menu

Republish Article

Please use the HTML above to republish this article. It is pre-formatted to follow our republication guidelines. Among other things, these require that the article not be edited; that the author’s byline is included; and that The Defender is clearly credited as the original source.

Please visit our full guidelines for more information. By republishing this article, you agree to these terms.

Woman drinking coffee looking at phone

Join hundreds of thousands of subscribers who rely on The Defender for their daily dose of critical analysis and accurate, nonpartisan reporting on Big Pharma, Big Food, Big Chemical, Big Energy, and Big Tech and
their impact on children’s health and the environment.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
  • This field is hidden when viewing the form
  • This field is hidden when viewing the form
    MM slash DD slash YYYY
  • This field is hidden when viewing the form