Terms

Animal Rights

A philosophical view that considers animals as morally equivalent to humans and rejects the use of animals for any reason: for clothing, food, entertainment, sport, companionship, transportation, rescue work, or biomedical research.

Animal Welfare

The responsibility we have to treat animals with compassion and to provide them with ethical care.

Bacteriology

The study of bacteria.

Biodefense

Defensive strategies and technologies to protect against attacks with biological agents. Involves development of diagnostics, vaccines and therapeutics to diagnose, prevent, and treat infections as well as technologies to detect potential bioweapons.

Biohazard

Biological hazard--any biological substance that poses a threat to health of humans or animals.

Biological agent

An organism or compound produced by a living organism that has biological effects on other organisms.

Biosafety

Biological safety - safety from infectious agents or toxins. Generally refers to standards and procedures in research laboratories articulated in "Biosafety in Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratories" published by the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of Health.

Biosecurity

Biological security - protocols and procedures to secure biological agents.

Biotechnology

Any technology that utilizes biological systems or living organisms to make or modify products for specific purposes.

Bioterrorism

The use or threatened use of biological agents for the purpose of inciting terror in a population.

Biotoxin

A type of biological agent. A poison-- often used to refer to compounds produced by plants, bacteria and some animals that are highly toxic for other organisms.

Biowarfare

The use of biological agents in warfare.

Bioweapon

Biological agents processed to be useful as weapons on the battlefield. Requires significant processing of the biological agent beyond simply growing the organism or producing the biotoxin.

Experimental Design

An experimental design describes how an experiment is performed to address a particular question. The design will encompass a variety of standardized experimental methods in unique and creative ways to address previously unanswered questions.

Experimental Methods

Experimental methods are proven techniques used as tools to address a particular research question. These techniques are standardized and are reproducible by different laboratories.

Regenerative Medicine

An approach to treat, cure, or prevent disease by altering or repairing defective genes.

Immunology

The study of the immune system and the mechanisms it uses to protect the body from abnormal or foreign substances, or organisms.

Infectious Disease

A disease that can be transmitted from person to person or from organism to organism and is caused by a microbial agent or prion.

Microbiology

The study of microorganisms, bacteria, viruses etc. and their effects on other living organisms.

Parasite

An organism that lives in or on the living tissue of a host organism at the expense of that host.

Parasitology

The study of parasites, their hosts, and the relationships between them.

Pathology

The study of disease, its causes, processes, development, and consequences.

Virology

The study of viruses.