1. EPA (2000) Benchmark dose technical guidance document, EPA/630/R-00/001, pp. 1–87, at p. 73 “In general, data from developmental toxicity studies in rodents are best modeled using nested models. These models account for any intralitter correlation, or the tendency of littermates to respond similarly to one another relative to the other litters in a dose group”.
2. Eriksson et al. (2005) Developmental toxicology in the neonatal mouse: the use of randomly selected individuals as statistical unit compared to the litter in mice neonatally exposed to PBDE 99, The Toxicologist, Abstract #1074, pp. 219–220.
3. Eriksson, Viberg, 2005. Tiered testing in mammals – the neonatal animal model. In: Hansson, S.O., Rudén, C. (Eds.) Science for A Safe Chemical Environment. pp. 103–133. Chapter 5
4. Neonatal co-exposure to low doses of an ortho-PCB (PCB 153) and methyl mercury exacerbate defective developmental neurobehavior in mice;Fischer;Toxicology,2008
5. FOIA, 2007a. Freedom of Information Act Request HQ-RIN-0163 9-07 (hereinafter FOIA) (Request for “a copy of e-mails, facsimiles, memorandums, meeting notes, phone call records, etc containing information on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) data request from Viberg et al. [Henrik Viberg, Anders Frederiksson, and Per Eriksson (Uppsala University); Eva Jakobsson and Ulrika Orn (Stockholm University)]”.