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Behavioral toxicology, an area within neurotoxicology, has contributed significantly to important developments in the Environmental Health Sciences. It has played important roles in removing lead from gasoline and in framing our understanding of pesticides and of methylmercury, to name just a few examples. It has also contributed to the emergence of human neurotoxicity testing that makes direct contact with the results of studies from animal laboratories. Behavioral toxicity can claim the experimental analysis of behavior, now often referred to as behavior analysis, as an ancestor. Here I list some of the papers that trace this early influence or that, in my view, have proven to be key contributors to the development.
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