News
such as computer modeling. Take the European Union, for example. The ban on testing cosmetic products and their ingredients in the U.K. began in 1998 before spreading across the rest of the EU in ...
The first realistic software models of human and animal organs are starting to emerge – potentially replacing some of the 50 to 100 million animals used each year for scientific research.
The Straits Times looks at some alternatives to animal testing. Computer modelling or in-silico screening can predict how compounds – such as the active ingredients in a cosmetic product ...
The Food and Drug Administration is kicking off a new approach to drug and device regulation that will use computer models and virtual patients to test cutting-edge products and speed up the ...
artificial skin or computer models to test the safety of products. And many multinational companies have embraced these alternative test methods, reducing and in some cases eliminating their ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results