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Neuroscientist Halts Research to Stop Extremists

FleaPlus writes "UCLA neuroscience professor Dario Ringach, known for his contributions to our understanding of how the visual system processes information, has been forced to give up his experiments by the actions of animal-rights extremists. Although he and his family had endured harassment and vandalization by animal-rights activists for years, Ringach reconsidered after extremists tried to firebomb a colleague's home and accidentally left their Molotov cocktail on an elderly neighbor's doorstep. Ringach sent an email to animal activist groups saying, 'You win... please don't bother my family anymore.'"

3 of 1,047 comments (clear)

  1. crude explosive by phlegmofdiscontent · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's interesting to note that the LA Times article calls it a crude explosive (which could be anything from firecracker to pipe bomb) while the other article calls it a Molotov Cocktail (which IS crude, but more specific). All that aside, obviously these people (if they did it) are complete and utter morons. One does not light a Molotov Cocktail and place it on a porch. One lights a Molotov Cocktail and throws it through a window (or air vent on a Soviet tank, which was the device's original purpose). The glass container breaks, spraying flammable liquid all over the place which then ignites, burning the place down. THAT is how one firebombs a house correctly.

  2. Re:"animal" rights? by FleaPlus · · Score: 5, Informative

    That's a question only UCLA and the researchers can really answer, by providing us with the information about what the research was. They refuse to do so.

    In all likelihood, it's because they don't want to give activists some convenient soundbite they can distort.

    In any case dude, it's not like Ringach's research is some big secret. As I've mentioned elsewhere in this thread, all you need to do is a Google Scholar search. Ringach's experiments are pretty much standard visual electrophysiology, where you record from neurons in visual cortex while you present stimuli to an animal. It's the same basic technique which Hubel and Wiesel got the 1981 Nobel Prize.

    What makes Ringach's research unique is (was?) the sorts of images he presented to the animals, and some clever data analysis.

  3. Why not... by coma_bug · · Score: 5, Informative

    English, does not have an adequate word for this kind of struggle, but ironically Arabic does: jihad.

    Why not crusade?