Animal experimentation

Psychology

Home » Psychology » Animal experimentation

The saying that ‘psychology is the science of pulling habits out of rats’ is based on the extensive animal experimentation carried out by behaviorists. Except for Watson’s Little Albert experiment, behaviorist theories resulted from and have been tested by experiments on animals. Apart from the ubiquitous lab rat, psychologists have used cats and dogs, and Skinner laterally found pigeons ideal subjects to experiment upon.

Skinner, like most behaviorists, was against human experimentation. But his ethics were questioned when he invented a ‘baby tender’, a secure enclosure with a controlled environment to replace cots. It was mocked as a Skinner box for infants and called ‘the heir conditioners’. Skinner believed operant conditioning works in a similar way for all species, and observation of animals gives insights into human behavior. While many behavioral scientists would agree, others find animal experiments of limited value in studying human psychology.

Connect

Latest posts:

Mind and brain

In many cultures around this world, there is the view that humans have a soul that exists independently of the physical body. For Greek philosophers, the soul was also viewed as the seat of our reasoning abilities - what we would call our minds today. While Aristotle...

Precursors of psychology

The natural sciences (physics, astronomy, chemistry, biology, and geology) developed out of philosophical speculations about the nature of reality. However, it wasn’t till the late nineteenth century that a systematic study of human thought emerged. One reason for...

Neuroscience

Around the middle of the nineteenth century, medical science turned its attention to disorders of the central nervous system. Early neuroscientists, including Jean-Martin Charcot, examined and documented conditions, such as multiple scleroses, prompting research into...

Medical conditions

Throughout history, mental health issues have been treated with suspicion, sometimes leading to fear. Some conditions, including depression and schizophrenia, have been blamed on supernatural forces; others, such as anxiety, have been associated with certain bodily...

Hypnosis

In the late eighteenth century, Austrian doctor Franz Anton Mesmer developed an approach to treating illness based on the idea that disease could be caused by a disturbance in the body's natural energy flow and cured by restoring the correct flow. He believed he could...



Free Semiology Course


Check it out!

Free Course in Semiology

 

A completely and truly free course on Semiology (Semiotics). Learn about the meaning of signs, how and why did the field emerged. What is the relationship between the street signs and the signs that we use every day - words.

 

Learn Semiology