The legacy of Adolf Meyer's comparative approach: Worcester rats and the strange birth of the animal model.

Cheryl A Logan
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

The breeding of albino rats had an enormous impact on experimental psychology in the twentieth century. Rats were, and for many questions still remain, the "standard animal" for laboratory research in neurology, psychology, and physiology. Albert Meyer was one of the figures most responsible for developing the albino rat as an experimental model. Despite Meyer's pioneering work with albino rats, his rat research has received only sparse attention. Little is known about the way in which the animal served Meyer's more famous psychiatric program. In this article, the author discusses the role that albino rats played in Meyer's animal research. He then turn to the contrast between the way in which Meyer viewed the animal's role in research and the way rats were later used as a laboratory "standard" to assure scientific generality. This comparison highlights the changes that occurred in comparative psychology in the twentieth century, and it further clarifies some of the concerns associated with the use of animal models today.

阿道夫·迈耶比较方法的遗产:伍斯特大鼠和动物模型的奇怪诞生。
白化大鼠的培育对20世纪的实验心理学产生了巨大的影响。老鼠曾经是神经学、心理学和生理学实验室研究的“标准动物”,至今仍存在许多问题。阿尔伯特·迈耶(Albert Meyer)是将白化鼠作为实验模型的主要负责人之一。尽管迈耶对白化老鼠进行了开创性的研究,但他的老鼠研究只得到很少的关注。人们对这只动物是如何服务于迈耶更著名的精神病学项目知之甚少。在这篇文章中,作者讨论了白化大鼠在Meyer的动物研究中所扮演的角色。然后,他转向迈耶看待动物在研究中的作用的方式与后来使用老鼠作为实验室“标准”以确保科学普遍性的方式之间的对比。这一对比突出了20世纪比较心理学发生的变化,并进一步澄清了与今天使用动物模型有关的一些问题。
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