Neuralink is purportedly the subject of an investigation by the USDA Inspector General over possible animal welfare violations connected to research testing. According to Reuters, internal documents demonstrate that staff employees have voiced worries about the company’s hurried animal testing, which they believe has resulted in unnecessary pain and death.
According to the news source, the corporation has slaughtered 1,500 animals since 2018, including more than 280 sheep, pigs, and monkeys. These figures don’t necessarily indicate that Neuralink is breaking the law, as the company’s facilities have passed all USDA inspections. However, former and present staff told Reuters that Elon Musk, the inventor of Neuralink, had put pressure on them to hasten research, which had resulted in flawed trials and, as a result, greater fatality rates than necessary.
Musk has reportedly been telling employees since the company was launched in 2016 to imagine that they had a bomb strapped to their heads to make them move faster. He also reportedly told staff that he would trigger a “market failure” unless they made progress, which some employees interpreted as a warning that he would shut down the company. Earlier this year, Musk also sent staff members an email with an article about Swiss researchers who created an implant that helped a paralyzed person walk again, Reuters said. “In general, we are simply not moving fast enough. It is driving me nuts!” he reportedly wrote in a follow-up email.
Upon reviewing internal testing documentation, Reuters said it found four experiments involving 86 pigs and two monkeys with results that were rendered questionable by human errors. Neuralink had to repeat those experiments, leading to more deaths. A message written by an angry employee talked about how rushed animal surgeries had led to under-prepared and overstressed employees who ended up making mistakes. A couple of examples Reuters found in the documents detailed how Neuralink staff implanted the company’s brain-machine interface device on the wrong vertebra of two different pigs — something that could’ve been easily prevented by counting the animals’ vertebrae — forcing the team to kill them to end their suffering.
Earlier this year, the animal rights group Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine accused the company of botching surgeries that killed monkeys. Neuralink admitted that it had killed six monkeys in its joint study with the University of California, Davis due to issues caused by their experiments. However, they defended their research and said that it didn’t break any laws.
Neuralink recently held an event announcing that it could start human trials within the next six months. During the program, company founder Elon Musk directly responded to the Physicians Committee’s accusations: “Before we would even think of putting a device in an animal, we do everything possible we with rigorous benchtop testing, We’re not cavalier about putting these devices into animals. We’re extremely careful and we always want the device, whenever we do the implant — whether into a sheep, pig, or monkey — to be confirmatory, not exploratory,” he said.
Reuters, however, said it found Neuralink records with numerous references to “exploratory surgeries.” Autumn Sorrells, Neuralink’s Animal Care Program Director, also reportedly ordered employees in October to remove “exploration” from their study titles and to stop using the term going forward.
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