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. 2015 Oct 8;10(10):e0139842. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0139842

Fig 7. Graphical representation of Go/No-Go results.

Fig 7

A) Accuracy, B) Impulsivity, C) Inaccuracy, and D) Response Inhibition, for female animals from the STD and IMP cohorts at the pre-injury (black bars) and post-injury (white bars) test sessions. Overall accuracy increased across all cohorts from the pre-injury session to the post-injury session, but the magnitude of change was greater for sham animals. Similar to males, the STD cohort exhibited a reduction in incorrect nose pokes with increased training but animals in the IMP cohort did not exhibit a change in the number of incorrect nose pokes. STD females exhibited significantly fewer impulsive nose pokes than IMP females at both time points. Finally, also like males, all animals except IMP-mTBIs demonstrated improvements in latency to nose poke on the NOGO trials, but the magnitude was greatest for the STD-shams (α significant effect of IMP at pre-injury, β significant effect of IMP at post-injury, x significant effect of mTBI, * significant effect of testing period, all p < .05).