Distance traveled in the open field (s) (panel A) and percent time spent in the center area of the open field (panel B) in 28-day-old male and female adolescent rats as a function of ethanol treatment (0.0 [vehicle], 0.5, 1.25, 2.5, and 3.25 g/kg ethanol or untreated [UT]). The rats were tested 5–9 min or 10–14 min post-administration. The data were collapsed across sex (male and female) and order of testing. The ANOVAs indicated that, regardless treatment, locomotion scores and percent time spent in the center were higher when the open field test occurred prior to the elevated plus maze test (EPM) than when testing occurred at 10–14 min following ethanol intubation, after termination of the EPM test. The sex factor did not exert a significant main effect or interact with the remaining factors. The asterisk indicates a significant difference between a given group and the 0.0 g/kg ethanol group. The pound sign indicates a significance difference between a given group and the untreated control group. The vertical bars indicate SEM.