1. Dr Jenia Meng - ORIGINS OF ATTITUDES TOWARDS ANIMALS (2009)
of human
medicine research
Genetic
Changes
AI No. 27 GCReproductive Increasing animals' reproductive or productive
capabilities by Genetic Changes, e.g. cows producing
more milk
AI No. 28 GCHealthDR Increasing animals' health or disease
http://jmeng.goodeasy.info/publications/OriginsOfAttitudesTowardsAnimals_JMeng2009.htm - 949.2kb
2. PLoS Medicine: Epigenetic Epidemiology of Common Complex Disease: Prospects ...
related to a multitude of epigenetic changes, which could arise through reverse causation (the disease influencing the epigenetic patterns) or confounding (factors associated with HNSCC risk influencing the epigenetic patterns). If the epigenetic
http://www.navs.org/site/R?i=Z9KUX6io355-W7vxDNXJlw.. - 160.5kb
3. Earth April Research
were: naturalness (Genetic changes) of animals, autonomy of
animals, animal experimentation, wildlife protection, spiritual power
of animals.
Respect for the autonomy of animals is
https://earthapril.goodeasy.info/research/AnimalWelfareIndexAnimalRightsIndex/ - 30.2kb
5. A Domesticated Wolf is a Dog | Psychology Today
physiological, and genetic changes during the process. Travis was a socialized chimpanzee who usually got along with humans but not a domesticated being. He still had his wild genes just as do wolves, cougars, and bears who live with
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/animal-emotions/200907/domesticated-wolf-is-dog - 55.2kb
7. The Third Chimpanzee, by Jared Diamond
structure in each species is genetically determined.
Suppose further that structure changes slowly over the course of
millions of years because of genetic mutations, and that the rate
of change is the
http://www.animal-rights-library.com/texts-m/diamond01.htm - 46.6kb