/ 22 March 2005

University’s crash tests all too real

Austrian authorities are investigating whether a university committed a crime when it used corpses as part of research to develop better crash-test dummies, a prosecutor said on Tuesday.

Horst Sigl, a prosecutor in the southern city of Graz, said authorities suspect that researchers at the Technical University of Graz might have violated the dignity of the dead by using bodies in tests.

”The core of the problem is whether those used in the tests or their relatives gave permission,” he said in a telephone interview.

The researchers used 21 bodies provided by the Medical University in Graz for tests performed between 1994 and 2003, said Alice Senarclens de Grancy, a spokesperson for the Technical University. The Medical University did not immediately return a phone call requesting comment.

Anyone convicted in the case could face imprisonment for up to six months or a fine, Sigl said, adding that the preliminary investigation likely will be finished in about a month.

Senarclens de Grancy rejected any suggestion that the dignity of the dead could have been disturbed in the tests, saying they were carried out under strict ethical standards.

”It’s not in any way a crash test as you might think about it,” she said. ”There is no car, there is no wall.”

During the tests, the bodies were placed in seats that moved with speeds up to 15kph before being stopped in an effort to simulate a rear-end collision. Scientists observed how the bodies’ vertebrae, upper bodies and backs moved.

Using real bodies was necessary to develop a ”dummy which is very similar to the human body, which reacts as the human body does”, Senarclens de Grancy said. — Sapa-AP