<u>Answer:
</u>
In most cases, a U.S. researcher affiliated with an academic institution, proposing to conducted funded research outside of the U.S., must have the approval of an IRB from both the researcher's U.S. institution and an equivalent entity within the host country.
<u>Explanation:
</u>
- It is mandatory for a researcher from the United States willing to conduct research within or outside the domestic boundary of the United States to have the approval of the Institutional Review Board of the institution that he is working with.
- If the researcher is willing to conduct research specifically outside the domestic boundaries of the US, he is required to form a collaboration with an institute functioning in the country of research and get an approval from the Institutional Review Board of that particular institute along with the approval of the IRB of his native academic institute.
Answer:
In that case it would be B.
Explanation:
There are 27 amendments to the constitution...
<span>Frederick Griffith
built up that there was a </span>transforming principle<span> in bacterial hereditary qualities in a pivotal
investigation in 1928 and was the main trial recommending that microorganisms
are fit for exchanging hereditary data through a procedure known as transformation.
The exact idea of the transformation principle (DNA) was confirmed in the
investigations done by Avery, McLeod, and McCarty and by Hershey and Pursue.</span>