Humane Society Institute for Science and Policy
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    5888 research outputs found

    Addressing the Veterinarian and Veterinary Technician Shortage: Innovations in Animal Healthcare Access

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    The United States is experiencing a shortage of veterinary care providers. A new group proposes innovative solutions

    Bird Flu Spreading to Farmed Mammals in the US

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    The more mammalian species infected by bird flu, the greater the threat of a new pandemic

    Animals and Healthy Ecosystems: It’s Complicated!

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    Wild animals, especially large animals, increase the biodiversity of ecosystems

    The Blue Zones, Well-being and Feeling Better

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    The Blue Zone concept has emerged from studies of communities with large numbers of healthy centenarians

    Illuminating Animal and Plant Sentience

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    WBI’s journal, Animal Sentience, advances our understanding of sentience (feeling) and its phylogenetic extent

    Birds, Bats and Minds. Tales of a Revolutionary Scientist: Donald R. Griffin. Volume Three

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    In this three-volume biography, we revisit the life and accomplishments of the revolutionary scientist, Donald R. Griffin. He encountered a lifetime of initial hostile resistance to his ideas and studies; now they are largely accepted. He and a colleague discovered the phenomenon of echolocation used by bats to navigate and capture insects, proposed that birds navigate guided by such cues as the sun and stars, and suggested that animals are likely aware, thinking and feeling beings. Forty interviews with his colleagues and friends help us understand the young emerging scientist and the mature researcher. We learn about his and others’ research up to the present times. We gain insights into his thinking and the rigors and delights of fieldwork. Efforts to promote animal well-being intrinsically depend upon the insights from his groundbreaking ideas. Volume three of the Griffin biography emphasizes his daring proposition that animals are likely to be aware, think, and have feelings. He is castigated as setting back science, but he amasses an enormous array of supportive evidence discussed in several of his books. Philosophers examine related issues. Griffin also tackles the possibility of human echolocation, the mysteries of bats\u27 “terminal buzz,” beaver social behavior, and the “near sound” acoustics of honeybee communication. With Katy Payne, he plans studies of elephants’ social behavior to assess what it is like to be an elephant and to guide optimal protective measures. The influence of several women in his life is described, noting their accomplishments, intelligence and independence. We obsereve the struggles of some women scientists and Griffins’ support of many. During his “retirement” from Rockefeller University and move back to Cape Cod and the Harvard Field Station, he writes several books about the new field he had founded, “Cognitive Ethology,” and actively conducts research. Finally, Volume three includes a compilation of statements about Griffin’s life and work from friends, colleagues and the media that may be summarized as Griffin being an intensely curious man, a remarkable intellect, a revolutionary scientist, and a most admirable human being, The volume has extensive Appendices, includine a timeline, a list of publications, and a glossary of terms.https://www.wellbeingintlstudiesrepository.org/ebooks/1033/thumbnail.jp

    What’s in a NAM?

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    Interest in and support for non-animal methods (NAMs) in biomedical research and testing continues to grow

    Pet Demographics: Evolving Numbers and Insights

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    Producing accurate estimates of dog and cat populations around the world is much more challenging than one might expect

    Children Observing Violence and Public Health Outcomes

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    Children observing violence is a public health threat that deserves increased global awareness

    Human-Animal Interactions and Edibility?

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    Does a growing pet-keeping culture affect other human-animal interactions

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    Humane Society Institute for Science and Policy is based in United States
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