## Abstract Adult male rats were exposed or shamโexposed to 60โHz electric fields without spark discharges, ozone, or significant levels of other secondary variables. No effects were observed on body weights or plasma hormone levels after 30 days of exposure at an effective field strength of 68 kV/
Effects of 60-Hz electric fields on avoidance behavior and activity of rats
โ Scribed by Dennis L. Hjeresen; William T. Kaune; John R. Decker; Richard D. Phillips
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1980
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 800 KB
- Volume
- 1
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0197-8462
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
In repeated shortโterm tests (four sessions, each of 45โminute duration), and one longer test (a 23.5โhour session), behavior of rats was evaluated in a long, narrow shuttlebox. One side of the box was exposed to an electric field at various strengths, while a visually identical opposite side was shielded from exposure. In the shortโterm tests, rats generally remained shielded from electric fields of 90 kV/m and greater during the first session, and maintained this response in subsequent sessions. In the longer test, this same preference response was demonstrated at field strengths of 75 kV/m and greater; however, at 25 and 50 kV/m, rats exhibited a statistically significant preference for the exposed region of the shuttlebox, but only during the light portion of a 12โhour light: 12โhour dark cycle. Exposed animals made more traverses than shamโexposed controls between the two ends of the shuttlebox during the first hour of the test. The experimental data support the hypothesis that the observed behavioral effects are the result of direct interaction of the electric field with the animal, and not the result of secondary factors such as electric shock, corona discharge, audible noise, ozone, or vibration of the experimental apparatus.
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