Ramsden Edmund
J Hist Behav Sci. 2015 Spring;51(2):164-94. doi: 10.1002/jhbs.21715. Epub 2015 Mar 4.
The use of animals as experimental organisms has been critical to the development of addiction research from the nineteenth century. They have been used as a means of generating reliable data regarding the processes of addiction that was not available from the study of human subjects. Their use, however, has been far from straightforward. Through focusing on the study of alcoholism, where the nonhuman animal proved a most reluctant collaborator, this paper will analyze the ways in which scientists attempted to deal with its determined sobriety and account for their consistent failure to replicate the volitional consumption of ethanol to the point of physical dependency. In doing so, we will see how the animal model not only served as a means of interrogating a complex pathology, but also came to embody competing definitions of alcoholism as a disease process, and alternative visions for the very structure and purpose of a research field.
自19世纪以来,将动物用作实验生物体对于成瘾研究的发展至关重要。它们被用作一种手段,以生成关于成瘾过程的可靠数据,而这些数据无法从对人类受试者的研究中获得。然而,它们的使用并非一帆风顺。通过聚焦于酗酒研究(在该研究中,非人类动物被证明是极不情愿的合作者),本文将分析科学家们试图应对其坚决戒酒的方式,并解释他们为何始终未能复制出对乙醇的自愿消费直至身体依赖的程度。在此过程中,我们将看到动物模型不仅作为一种探究复杂病理的手段,而且还体现了作为疾病过程的酗酒的相互竞争的定义,以及对一个研究领域的结构和目的的不同愿景。