share. Disturbing Owl Experiments at Johns Hopkins University ( headlines.peta.org) submitted a minute ago by EarthlingElf. October 30, 2018 Tags: ADHD, attention, Johns Hopkins University, owls, Shreesh Mysore Posted in Natural Sciences, Psychology. However, PETA’s case centers on a Maryland state law that requires interested parties to apply for a permit in order to possess protected birds. Experiments on owls are legal because of the Helms amendment, named for former Senator Jesse Helms who in 2002 proposed a loophole to the 1966 Animal Welfare Act that excludes birds, mice and rats bred for use in research from the AWA definition of the term “animal.” Johns Hopkins’ owls were all bred in captivity, according to the complaint. So Mysore's lab is doing experiments in which an owl … ... Owl … Office of Communications Johns Hopkins University 3910 Keswick Road, Suite N2600 Baltimore, Maryland 21211 Phone: 443-997-9009 | Fax: 443 997-1006 save. hide. Yet this respect is left at the door of a laboratory at Johns Hopkins University (JHU), whose experiments on barn owls —paid for by taxpayers—must be ended immediately. A citywide ad blitz from the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals takes aim at Johns Hopkins University for running brain tests on owls. Cutting into owls’ skulls to expose their brains, screwing and gluing metal devices onto their heads, poking electrodes around in fully conscious birds’ brains—at Johns Hopkins University (JHU), Shreesh Mysore does all this and more, even though he admitted during a seminar that the results of his experiments on these animals in his lab could be misleading. “We have, in fact, never collected owls from the wild since I started owl research at Johns Hopkins University in 2014,” Mysore wrote. A Johns Hopkins University associate professor has been cruelly treating barn owls in order to conduct studies and experiments on attention deficit disorder , so says People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA). report. Funded by Johns Hopkins University and taxpayer money through the National Institutes of Health to the tune of more than $2.5 million, Mysore intends to use 50 to 60 barn owls in just the current set of painful experiments—including six birds simply for surgical practice for his staff. September 9, 2020. Pioneering animal rights organization People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) files a first-of-its-kind lawsuit against U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Tom Vilsack and Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Administrator Kevin Shea alleging unconstitutional, taxpayer-funded experiments at a laboratory in Johns Hopkins University (JHU). Few bird species are as revered by humans as owls, who are seen as wise and calm and are admired for their swift, silent flight. Johns Hopkins University and Shreesh Mysore can no longer get away with the abuse and inhumane killing and experimentation on countless barn owls in the name of mental health research. Scientists at Johns Hopkins University are studying barn owls to understand how the brain maintains focus.