The ability of estradiol benzoate (EB) or EB plus progesterone (P) to induce estrous behavior in the rat is substantially decreased during pregnancy, an effect not solely attributable to high titers of circulating
We motivate and describe an analog evolvable hardware design platform named GRACE (i.e. Generative Robust Analog Circuit Exploration). GRACE combines coarse-grained, topological circuit search with intrinsic testing on a Commercial Off-The-Shelf (COTS) field programmable device, the Anadigm AN221E04. It is suited for adaptive, fault tolerant system design as well as CAD flow applications.
Gonadectomized rats bearing s.c. Silastic capsules containing crystalline oestradiol-17 beta diluted with cholesterol, or oestradiol-17 beta dissolved in sesame oil were tested for the presence of a diurnal rhythm in the display of lordotic behaviour. In experiment 1, female rats received four consecutive tests at intervals of 8 h in a lighting regimen of 12 h light: 12 h darkness beginning 4, 14 and 28 days after implantation of 5 mm capsules of oestradiol. After a single test on day 4, male rats were tested on days 14-15 only, at the same times as the female rats. Female animals were tested while vaginal-cervical stimulation was prevented by vaginal masking beginning 35 days after implantation of oestradiol. In experiment 2, lordotic responsiveness of female rats was assessed beginning 4 days after implantation of oestradiol once on each of 3 consecutive days, with each test occurring at a different time of day. Finally, in experiment 3, female rats were tested as in experiment 1 beginning 4 dys after implantation of lower threshold amounts of oestradiol in oil-filled capsules. In no experiment were changes in lordotic behaviour observed as a function of the time of day. These findings failed to support recent reports of a sexually dimorphic rhythm in lordotic responsiveness to oestradiol in the rat.
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