Russell and Burch’s Principles of Humane Experimental Techniques

  1. The Scope of Humane Technique: Table of Contents
  2. Foreword to Special Edition
  3. Preface
  4. Scope of the Study
  5. Integration in the Vertebrate Organism
  6. Pain and Distress
  7. The Criteria for and Measurement of Distress
  8. Man and the Animal World
  9. Monitoring Animal Experimentation
  10. The L.A.B. Survey of 1952
  11. The L.A.B. Data: A Further Analysis
  12. Results of the Analysis
  13. The Latest Developments
  14. Direct and Contingent Inhumanity
  15. The Analysis of Direct Inhumanity
  16. The Diagnosis of Disease
  17. The Removal of Inhumanity: The Three R’s
  18. Contingent Inhumanity and the Problem of Scale
  19. The Principles of Humane Experimental Technique: Table of Contents
  20. Comparative Substitution
  21. Modes of Absolute and Relative Replacement
  22. The Principles of Replacement
  23. The Uses of Tissue Culture
  24. The Uses of Microorganisms
  25. Reduction and Strategy in Research
  26. The Problem with Variance
  27. The Design and Analysis of Experiments
  28. The Sources of Physiological Variance
  29. The Control of Phenotype
  30. The Control of the Proximate, especially Behavioral Environment
  31. Neutral and Stressful Studies
  32. Generally Superimposed Procedures
  33. The Choice of Procedures
  34. The Choice of Species
  35. A Concrete Problem: Experimental Psychiatry and the Humane Study of Fear
  36. The Personality Factors
  37. The Sociological Factors
  38. Special Organizations
  39. Conclusion
  40. The Principles of Humane Experimental Technique: References and Source Index
  41. The Principles of Humane Experimental Technique: Addendum
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