
-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
Netanyahu meets Trump for tariff and Gaza talks
-
German police earn their stripes with zebra-loaded van stop
-
'Bloodbath': Spooked Republicans warn Trump over US tariffs
-
Belgian prince loses legal quest for social security
-
France detains alleged Romanian royal wanted in home country
-
Netanyahu to plead with Trump for tariff break
-
JPMorgan Chase CEO warns tariffs will slow growth
-
Stocks sink again as Trump holds firm on tariffs
-
Honda executive resigns over 'inappropriate conduct'
-
'Alarming' microplastic pollution in Europe's great rivers
-
Japan emperor visits World War II battleground Iwo Jima
-
'Everyone is losing money': Hong Kong investors rattled by market rout
-
China vows to stay 'safe and promising land' for foreign investment
-
Stocks savaged as China retaliation to Trump tariffs fans trade war
-
Belgian prince seeks social security on top of allowance
-
European airlines hit turbulence over Western Sahara flights
-
Boeing faces new civil trial over 2019 Ethiopian Airlines crash
-
Equities savaged as China retaliation to Trump tariffs fans trade war
-
Netanyahu and Trump to talk tariffs, Iran and Gaza
-
New app hopes to empower artists against AI
-
GA-ASI Expands Targeting Capability for MQ-9B SeaGuardian(R)
-
World scrambles to temper Trump tariffs: White House
-
Torrential rains kill dozens in DR Congo capital
-
Vietnam seeks US tariff delay as economic growth slows in first quarter
-
UK readies to protect industry as US tariffs upend global order: Starmer
-
Vietnam economic growth slows in first quarter as US tariffs loom
-
The scientist rewriting DNA, and the future of medicine
-
'Anxious': US farmers see tariffs threaten earnings
-
Nostalgia fuels UK boom in vintage video game repairs
-
Snappy birthday: Germany's Leica camera turns 100
-
India's Modi in Sri Lanka for defence and energy deals
-
Fractious Republicans seek unity over Trump tax cuts
-
Trump's global tariff takes effect in dramatic US trade shift
-
'I don't have a voice in my head': Life with no inner monologue
-
Lula admits 'still a lot to do' for Indigenous Brazilians
-
California to defy Trump's tariffs to allay global trade fears
-
Sean 'Diddy' Combs faces more charges ahead of criminal trial
-
Intercommunal violence kills dozens in central Nigeria
-
Trump goads China as global trade war escalates
-
How can the EU respond to Trump tariffs?
-
Canada loses jobs for first time in 3 years as US tariffs bite
-
Nations divided ahead of decisive week for shipping emissions
-
US job growth strong in March but Trump tariff impact still to come
-
Stocks, oil slump as China retaliates and Trump digs in heels
-
US hiring beats expectations in March as tariff uncertainty brews
-
Where things stand in the US-China trade war
-
UK spy agency MI5 reveals fruity secrets in new show
-
Taiwan earmarks $2.7 bn to help industries hit by US tariffs
-
Greece nixes Acropolis shoot for 'Poor Things' director
RBGPF | 1.48% | 69.02 | $ | |
NGG | -3.61% | 63.63 | $ | |
RIO | 0.12% | 54.737 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.82% | 22.109 | $ | |
BTI | -0.44% | 39.685 | $ | |
RYCEF | 0.12% | 8.26 | $ | |
VOD | -1.31% | 8.39 | $ | |
GSK | -4.73% | 34.88 | $ | |
AZN | -3.85% | 65.92 | $ | |
RELX | -5.15% | 45.8 | $ | |
SCS | -3.42% | 10.23 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.93% | 22.62 | $ | |
BCC | -1.24% | 94.27 | $ | |
BCE | -2.48% | 22.16 | $ | |
BP | -3.33% | 27.465 | $ | |
JRI | -5.61% | 11.325 | $ |

Controversial monkey study reignites animal testing debate
Mother monkeys permanently separated from their newborns sometimes find comfort in plush toys: this recent finding from Harvard experiments has set off intense controversy among scientists and reignited the ethical debate over animal testing.
The paper, "Triggers for mother love" was authored by neuroscientist Margaret Livingstone and appeared in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) in September to little fanfare or media coverage.
But once news of the study began spreading on social media, it provoked a firestorm of criticism and eventually a letter to PNAS signed by over 250 scientists calling for a retraction.
Animal rights groups meanwhile recalled Livingstone's past work, that included temporarily suturing shut the eyelids of infant monkeys in order to study the impact on their cognition.
"We cannot ask monkeys for consent, but we can stop using, publishing, and in this case actively promoting cruel methods that knowingly cause extreme distress," wrote Catherine Hobaiter, a primatologist at the University of St Andrews, who co-authored the retraction letter.
Hobaiter told AFP she was awaiting a response from the journal before further comment, but expected news soon.
Harvard and Livingstone, for their part, have strongly defended the research.
Livingstone's observations "can help scientists understand maternal bonding in humans and can inform comforting interventions to help women cope with loss in the immediate aftermath of suffering a miscarriage or experiencing a still birth," said Harvard Medical School in a statement.
Livingstone, in a separate statement, said: "I have joined the ranks of scientists targeted and demonized by opponents of animal research, who seek to abolish lifesaving research in all animals."
Such work routinely attracts the ire of groups such as People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), which opposes all forms of animal testing.
This controversy has notably provoked strong responses in the scientific community, particularly from animal behavior researchers and primatologists, said Alan McElligot of the City University of Hong Kong's Centre for Animal Health and a co-signer of the PNAS letter.
He told AFP that Livingstone appears to have replicated research performed by Harry Harlow, a notorious American psychologist, from the mid-20th century.
Harlow's experiments on maternal deprivation in rhesus macaques were considered groundbreaking, but may have also helped catalyze the early animal liberation movement.
"It just ignored all of the literature that we already have on attachment theory," added Holly Root-Gutteridge, an animal behavior scientist at the University of Lincoln in Britain.
- Harm reduction -
McElligot and Root-Gutteridge argue the case was emblematic of a wider problem in animal research, in which questionable studies and papers continue to pass institutional reviews and are published in high impact journals.
McElligot pointed to a much-critiqued 2020 paper extolling the efficiency of foot snares to capture jaguars and cougars for scientific study in Brazil.
More recently, experiments on marmosets that included invasive surgeries have attracted controversy.
The University of Massachusetts Amherst team behind the work says studying the tiny monkeys, which have 10-year-lifespans and experience cognitive decline in their old age, are essential to better understand Alzheimers in people.
Opponents argue results rarely translate across species.
When it comes to testing drugs, there is evidence the tide is turning against animal trials.
In September, the US Senate passed the bipartisan FDA Modernization Act, which would end a requirement that experimental medicines first be tested on animals before any human trials.
The vast majority of drugs that pass animal tests fail in human trials, while new technologies such as tissue cultures, mini organs and AI models are also reducing the need for live animals.
Opponents also say the vast sums of money that flow from government grants to universities and other institutes -- $15 billion annually, according to watchdog group White Coat Waste -- perpetuate a system in which animals are viewed as lab resources.
"The animal experimenters are the rainmaker within the institutions, because they're bringing in more money," said primatologist Lisa Engel-Jones, who worked as a lab researcher for three decades but now opposes the practice and is a science advisor for PETA.
"There's financial incentive to keep doing what you've been doing and just look for any way you can to get more papers published, because that means more funding and more job security," added Emily Trunnel, a neuroscientist who experimented on rodents and also now works for PETA.
Most scientists do not share PETA's absolutist stance, but instead say they adhere to the "three Rs" framework -- refine, replace and reduce animal use.
On Livingstone's experiment, Root-Gutteridge said the underlying questions might have been studied on wild macaques who naturally lost their young, and urged neuroscientists to team up with animal behaviorists to find ways to minimize harm.
Ch.Lefebvre--CPN