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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Oct 21.
Published in final edited form as: Horm Behav. 2020 May 27;122:104759. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2020.104759

Fig. 1. Males and females maternally exposed to OPFRs differed on locomotor behavior in the open field test (OFT).

Fig. 1.

A) No effects were observed in perimeter time (sec). B) OPFR-exposed females exhibited a decrease in the number of entries in the corners of the OFT, in contrast to same-sex oil controls. We saw no effect in OPFR-exposed males in the number of corner entries. C) Maternal exposure to OPFRs reduced time in the 10-cm center zone in males; however, no effect was detected in females on this measure. D) OPFR exposure decreased distance traveled (m) in females. OPFR-exposed males exhibited an inverse trend. This suggests that males and females maternally exposed to OPFRs are differentially affected in locomotor activity on this task. */a = p < .05; capped lines = exposure effect; a = pairwise difference between exposure within sex; data are represented as mean ± SEM.