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Crews Lab

The Reproductive Biology Laboratory of David Crews

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Reprints

Some reprints from the last decade are available in PDF format. These are designated by a link titled “PDF” to the left of the bibliographic entry. Since these are often very large files, we recommend you download them instead of viewing them in your browser. (PC users: right-click on the link, Mac users: click and hold. Then select “download/save link to disk”.) Please note that this is the most convenient way for you to immediately have access to these reprints, they are free of charge in all cases.

Publications prior to 1994

PDF 166. David Crews. 1975. Psychobiology of reptilian reproduction. Science 189: 1059-1065.

PDF 167. David Crews. 1979. The hormonal control of behavior in a lizard. Scientific American 241: 180-187.

PDF 168. David Crews and William R. Garstka. 1982. The ecological physiology of a garter snake. Scientific American 247: 159-168.

PDF 169. David Crews and Michael C.Moore. 1985. Evolution of mechanisms controlling mating behavior. Science 257: 121-125.

PDF 170. David Crews. 1987. Courtship in unisexual lizards: A model for brain evolution. Scientific American 257: 116-121.

PDF Eric Thomas, Paul Licht, Than Wibbels, and David Crews. 1992. Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activity associated with sexual differentiation in embryos of the Turtle Trachemys scripta. Biology Reproduction: 140-145.

PDF 180. David Crews. 1993. The organizational concept and vertebrates without sex chromosomes. Brain, Behavior and Evolution 42: 202-214.

PDF 183. David Crews. 1994. Animal sexuality. Scientific American 270: 108-114.

Publications since 1994

PDF 184. Alan Tousignant and David Crews. 1994. Effect of exogenous estradiol applied at different embryonic stages on sex determination, growth, and mortality in the leopard gecko (Eublepharis macularius). Journal of Experimental Zoology 268: 17-21.

PDF 185. Paul A. Kingston and David Crews. 1994. Role of the effects of hypothalamic lesions on courtship and copulatory behavior in sexual and unisexual whiptail lizards. Brain Research 643: 349-351.

PDF 186. Deborah Flores, Alan Tousignant, and David Crews. 1994. Incubation temperature affects the behavior of adult leopard geckos (Eublepharis macularius). Physiology and Behavior 55: 1067-1072.

PDF 187. David Crews, Judith M. Bergeron, Deborah Flores, James J. Bull, James K. Skipper, Alan Tousignant, and Thane Wibbels. 1994. Temperature-dependent sex determination in reptiles: Proximate mechanisms, ultimate outcomes, and practical applications. Developmental Genetics 15: 297-312.

PDF 188. Thane Wibbels and David Crews. 1994. Putative aromatase inhibitor induces male sex determination in a female unisexual lizard and in a turtle with temperature-dependent sex determination. Journal of Endocrinology 141: 295-299.

PDF 189. Diane M. Witt, Larry J. Young, and David Crews. 1994. Progesterone and sexual behavior in males. Psychoneuroendocrinology 19: 553-562.

PDF 190. Judith M. Bergeron, David Crews, and John A. McLachlan. 1994. PCBs as environmental estrogens: Turtle sex determination as a biomarker of environmental contamination. Environmental Health Perspectives 102: 780-781.

191. David Crews. 1994. Constraints to parthenogenesis. In The Differences Between the Sexes. R. V. Short and E. Balaban (eds.). Cambridge University Press, England: 23-49.

PDF 192. David Crews. 1994. Temperature, steroids, and sex determination. Journal of Endocrinology 142: 1-8.

PDF 193. Larry J. Young, Gregory F. Lopreato, Karen Horan, and David Crews. 1994. Cloning and in situ hybridization analysis of estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and androgen receptor expression in the brain of whiptail lizards (Cnemidophorus uniparens and C. inornatus). Journal of Comparative Neurology 347: 288-300.

194. Thane Wibbels, James J. Bull, and David Crews. 1994. Temperature-dependent sex determination: A mechanistic approach. Journal of Experimental Zoology 270: 71-78.

PDF 195. Matthew S. Rand and David Crews. 1994. The bisexual brain: Sex behavior differences and sex differences in parthenogenetic and sexual lizards. Brain Research 663: 163-167.

196. David Crews, Alan Tousignant, and Thane Wibbels. 1994. Considerations for inducing reproduction in captive reptiles. In Captive Management and Conservation of Amphibians and Reptiles, J. B. Murphy, K. Adler, and J. T. Collins (eds.). Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles, Ithaca, New York: 133-145.

PDF 197. David Crews and Judith M. Bergeron. 1994. Role of reductase and aromatase in sex determination in the red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta), a turtle with temperature-dependent sex determination. Journal of Endocrinology 143: 279-289.

PDF 198. Alan Tousignant and David Crews. 1995. Incubation temperature and gonadal sex affect growth and physiology in the leopard gecko (Eublepharis macularius), a lizard with temperature-dependent sex determination. Journal of Morphology 224: 159-170.

PDF 199. Diane M. Witt, Larry J. Young, and David Crews. 1995. Progesterone modulation of androgen-dependent sexual behavior in male rats. Physiology and Behavior 57: 307-313.

PDF 200. Larry J. Young, Pratip K. Nag, and David Crews. 1995. Regulation of estrogen receptor and progesterone receptor messenger ribonucleic acid by estrogen in the brain of the whiptail lizard (Cnemidophorus uniparens). Journal of Neuroendocrinology 7: 119-125.

PDF 201. Alan Tousignant, Brian Viets, Deborah Flores, and David Crews. 1995. Ontogenetic and social factors affect the endocrinology and timing of reproduction in the female leopard gecko (Eublepharis macularius). Hormones and Behavior 29: 141-153.

PDF 202. Allison M. Kendrick, Matthew S. Rand, and David Crews. 1995. Electrolytic lesions to the ventromedial hypothalamus abolish sexual receptivity in female whiptail lizards, Cnemidophorus uniparens. Brain Research 680: 226-228.
PDF 203. Larry J. Young, Pratip K. Nag, David Crews. 1995. Species differences in behavioral and neural sensitivity to estrogen in whiptail lizards: Correlation with hormone receptor messenger ribonucleic acid expression. Neuroendocrinology 61: 680-686.

PDF 204. Kira L. Wennstrom and David Crews. 1995. Making males from females: The effects of aromatase inhibitors on a parthenogenetic species of whiptail lizard. General and Comparative Endocrinology 99: 316-322.

PDF 205. Thane Wibbels and David Crews. 1995. Steroid-induced sex determination at incubation temperatures producing mixed sex ratios in a turtle with TSD. General and Comparative Endocrinology 100: 53-60.

PDF 206. David Crews, Amador R. Cantú, Judith M. Bergeron, and Turk Rhen. 1995. The relative effectiveness of androstenedione, testosterone, and estrone, precursors to estradiol, in sex reversal in the red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta), a turtle with temperature-dependent sex determination. General and Comparative Endocrinology 100: 119-127.

PDF 207. Larry J. Young, Pratip K. Nag, and David Crews. 1995. Species differences in estrogen receptor and progesterone receptor mRNA expression in the brain of sexual and unisexual whiptail lizards. Journal of Neuroendocrinology 7: 567-576.

PDF 208. John Godwin and David Crews. 1995. Sex differences in estrogen and progesterone receptor messenger ribonucleic acid regulation in the brain of little striped whiptail lizards. Neuroendocrinology 62: 293-300.

PDF 209. Larry James Young and David Crews. 1995. Comparative neuroendocrinology of steroid receptor gene expression and regulation: Relationship to physiology and behavior. Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism 6: 317-323.

PDF 210. Mary T. Mendonca, Alan J. Tousignant, and David Crews. 1995. Seasonal changes and annual variability in daily plasma melatonin in the red-sided garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis). General and Comparative Endocrinology 100: 226-237.

PDF 211. David Crews, Judith M. Bergeron, and John A. McLachlan. 1995. The role of estrogen in turtle sex determination and the effect of PCBs. Environmental Health Perspectives 103 (Supplement 7): 73-77.

PDF 212. Deborah Lynne Flores and David Crews. 1995. Effect of hormonal manipulation on sociosexual behavior in adult female leopard geckos (Eublepharis macularius), a species with temperature-dependent sex determination. Hormones and Behavior 29: 458-473.

PDF 213. Larry J. Young, John Godwin, Mike Grammer, Manfred Gahr, and David Crews. 1995. Reptilian sex steroid receptors: Amplification, sequence and expression analysis. Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 55: 261-269.

PDF 214. Mary T. Mendonca, Alan J. Tousignant, and David Crews. 1996. Pinealectomy, melatonin and courtship behavior in male red-sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis). Journal of Experimental Zoology 274: 63-74.

PDF 215. David Crews. 1996. Temperature-dependent sex determination: The interplay of steroid hormones and temperature. Zoological Science 13: 1-13.

PDF 216. Mary T. Mendonca and David Crews. 1996. Effects of ovarectomy and estrogen replacement on attractivity and receptivity in a dissociated pattern breeder, the red-sided garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis). Journal of Comparative Physiology A 178: 373-381.

PDF 217. John Godwin, Vesta Hartman, Michael Grammer, and David Crews. 1996. Progesterone inhibits female-typical receptive behavior and decreases hypothalamic estrogen and progesterone receptor messenger ribonucleic acid levels in whiptail lizards (genus Cnemidophorus). Hormones and Behavior 30: 138-144.

PDF 218. Mary T. Mendonca, Alan J. Tousignant, and David Crews. 1996. Courting and noncourting male garter snakes, Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis: Plasma melatonin levels and the effects of pinealectomy. Hormones and Behavior 30: 176-185.

PDF 219. David Crews, Amador R. Cantú, Turk Rhen, and Rais Vohra. 1996. The relative effectiveness of estrone, estradiol-17ß, and estriol in sex reversal in the red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta), a turtle with temperature-dependent sex determination. General and Comparative Endocrinology 102: 317-326.

PDF 220. David Crews, Amador R. Cantú, Judith M. Bergeron. 1996. Temperature and non-aromatizable androgens: A common pathway in male sex determination in a turtle with temperature-dependent sex determination? Journal of Endocrinology 149: 457-463.

PDF 221. David Crews, John Godwin, Vesta Hartman, Michael Grammar, Ellen A. Prediger, and Rebecca Shephard. 1996. Intrahypothalamic implantation of progesterone in castrated male whiptail lizards (Cnemidophorus inornatus) elicits courtship and copulatory behavior and affects androgen receptor and progesterone receptor-mRNA expression in the brain. Journal of Neuroscience 16: 7347-7352.

PDF 222. Vesta Hartman and David Crews. 1996. Sociosexual stimuli affect ER- and PR-mRNA abundance in the hypothalamus of whiptail lizards. Brain Research 741: 344-347.

PDF 223. John Godwin, David Crews, and Robert R. Warner. 1996. Behavioral sex change in the absence of gonads in a coral reef fish. Proceedings of the Royal Society, Series B 263: 1683-1688.

PDF 224. David Crews, Patricia Coomber, Ryan Baldwin, Nilofer Azad, and Francisco Gonzalez-Lima. 1996. Brain organization in a reptile lacking sex chromosomes: Effects of gonadectomy on exogenous testosterone. Hormones and Behavior 30: 474-486.

225. David Crews. 1996. Species diversity and the evolution of behavioral controlling mechanisms. In The Intergrative Neurology of Affiliation. C.S. Carter, I. Izja Lederhendler, and Brian Kirkpatrick (eds.). Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, New York. pp. 1-21. Reprinted in 1999 by MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.

PDF 226. Patricia Coomber, David Crews, and Francisco Gonzalez-Lima. 1997. Independent effects of incubation temperature and gonadal sex on the volume and metabolic capacity of brain nuclei in the leopard gecko (Eublepharis macularius), a lizard with temperature-dependent sex determination. Journal of Comparative Neurology 380: 409-421.

PDF 227. Dirk Jones, Francisco Gonzalez-Lima, David Crews, Bennett G. Galef, and Mertice M. Clark. 1997. Effects of intrauterine position on metabolic capacity of the hypothalamus of female gerbils. Physiology and Behavior 61: 513-519.

PDF 228. David Crews, Patricia Coomber, and Francisco Gonzalez-Lima. 1997. Effects of age and sociosexual experience on the morphology and metabolic capacity of brain nuclei in the leopard gecko (Eublepharis macularius), a lizard with temperature-dependent sex determination. Brain Research 758: 169-179.

PDF 229. Steven F. Arnold, Judith M. Bergeron, Dat Tran, David Crews, William A. Toscano, Jr. and John A. McLachlan. 1997. Synergetic responses of sterodial estrogens in vitro (yeast) and in vivo (turtles). Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications 235: 336-342.

PDF 230. John Godwin and David Crews. 1997. Sex differences in the nervous system of reptiles. Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology 17: 649-669.

PDF 231. David Crews. 1998. On the organization of individual differences in sexual behavior. American Zoologist 38: 118-132.

PDF 232. Judith M. Bergeron, Manfred Gahr, Karen Horan, Thane Wibbels and David Crews. 1998. Cloning and in situ hybridization analysis of estrogen receptor in the developing gonad of the red-eared slider turtle, a species with temperature-dependent sex determination. Development, Growth and Differentiation 40: 243-254.

PDF 233. Kira Wennstrom and David Crews. 1998. Effect of long-term castration and long-term androgen treatment on sexually dimorphic estrogen-inducible progesterone receptor mRNA levels in the ventromedial hypothalamus of whiptail lizards. Hormones and Behavior 34: 11-16.

PDF 234. David Crews, Jon Sakata, and Turk Rhen. 1998. Developmental effects on intersexual and intrasexual variation in growth and reproduction in a lizard with temperature-dependent sex determination. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology (Part C) 119: 229-241.

235. Judith M. Bergeron and David Crews. 1998. Effects of estrogenic compunds in reptiles: Turtles. In Principles and Processes for Evaluating Endocrine Disruption in Wildlife. Roland J. Kendall, Richard L. Dickerson, John P. Giesy, and William P. Suk(eds.). Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry Press, Pensacola, Florida. pp. 291-300.

236. Juli Wade and David Crews. 1998. The biopsychology of lizard reproductive behavior. In Comparitive Psychology: A Handbook. G. Greenberg and M. Haraway (eds.). Garland Publishing, N.Y. pp. 348-354.

PDF 237. Steven M. Phelps, John Lydon, Bert W. O’Malley, and David Crews. 1998. Regulation of male sexual behavior by progesterone receptor, sexual experience and androgen. Hormones and Behavior 34: 294-302.

PDF 238. David Crews. 1998. The evolutionary antecedents of love. Psychoneuroendocrinology 23: 751-764.

PDF 239. David Crews. 1998. Biology and relationships: Adaptation in nature. Family Systems 4: 99-106.

240. David Crews and James Perran Ross. 1998. Consequences of hormone disruption of sexual development for crocodilian conservation. In Crocodiles. Proceedings of the 24th Working Meeting of the Crocodile Specialist Group of the Species Survival Commission of IUCN- The World Conservation Union. IUCN- The World Conversation Union, Gland Switzerland. pp. 174-190.

PDF 241. David Crews. 1999. Reptilian reproduction, overview. In Encyclopedia of Reproduction. Ernst Knobil and Jimmy D.Neill (eds.). Academic Press, New York. pp. 254-259.

PDF 242. Judith M. Bergeron, Emily Willingham, C. Todd Osborn III, Turk Rhen, and David Crews. 1999. Developmental synergism of steroidal estrogens in sex determination. Environmental Health Perspectives 107: 93-97.

PDF 243. Daniel M. Sheehan, Emily J. Willingham, David Gaylor, Judith M. Bergeron, and David Crews. 1999. No threshold dose for oestradiol-induced sex reversal of turtle embryos: How little is too much? Environmental Health Perspectives 107: 155-159.

PDF 244. Emily Willingham and David Crews. 1999. Sex reversal effects of environmentally relevant xenobiotic concentrations on the red-eared slider turtle, a species with temperature-dependent sex determination. General and Comparative Endocrinology 113: 429-435.

PDF 245. John Godwin and David Crews. 1999. Hormonal regulation of progesterone receptor mRNA expression in the hypothalamus of whiptail lizards: Regional and species differences. Journal of Neurobiology 39: 287-293.

PDF 246. Elaine B. Day, David Crews, and Walter Wilczynski. 1999. Spatial and reversal learning in congeneric lizards with different foraging strategies. Animal Behaviour 57: 393-407.

PDF 247. Kira Wennstrom, Fae Blesius, and David Crews. 1999. Volumetric analysis of sexually dimorphic limbic nuclei in normal and sex-reversed whiptail lizards. Brain Research 838: 104-109.

PDF 248. Turk Rhen and David Crews. 1999. Embryonic temperature and gonadal sex organize male-typical sexual and aggressive behavior in a lizard with temperature-dependent sex determination. Endocrinology 140: 4501-4508.

PDF 249. Turk Rhen, Julie Ross, and David Crews. 1999. Effects of testosterone on sexual behavior and morphology in adult female leopard geckos, Eublepharis macularius. Hormones and Behavior 36: 119-128.

PDF 250. Turk Rhen, Emily Willingham, Jon Sakata, and David Crews. 1999. Incubation temperature influences sex-steroid levels in juvenile red-eared slider turtles, Trachemys scripta, a species with temperature-dependent sex determination. Biology of Reproduction 61: 1275-1280.

PDF 251. David Crews. 1999. Sexuality: The environmental organization of phenotype plasticity. In Reproduction in Context. K. Wallen and J. Schneider (eds.). M.I.T. Press, Cambridge. pp. 473-499.

252. Thane Wibbels, Charles Wilson, and David Crews. 1999. Mullerian duct development and differentiation in a turtle with temperature – dependent sex determination. Journal of Herpetology 33P: 149-152.

PDF 253. Alice Fleming, Thane Wibbels, James K. Skipper, and David Crews. 1999. Developmental expression of steroidogenic factor 1 in a turtle with temperature-dependent sex determination. General and Comparative Endocrinology 116: 336-346.

PDF 254. Thane Wibbels, Charles Wilson, and David Crews. 1999. Mullerian duct development and regression in a turtle with temperature-dependent sex determination. Journal of Herpetology 33: 149-152.

PDF 255. David Crews and Jon Sakata. 2000. Evolution of brain mechanisms controlling sexual behavior. In Sexual Differentiation of the Brain. A. Matsumoto (ed.). CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL. pp. 113-130.

PDF 256. Emily Willingham, Turk Rhen, Jon T. Sakata, and David Crews. 2000. Embryonic treatment with xenobiotics disrupts steroid hormone profiles in hatchling red-eared slider turtles (Trachemys scripta). Environmental Health Perspectives 108: 329-332.

PDF 257. John Godwin, Vesta Hartman, Pratip Nag, and David Crews. 2000. Androgenic regulation of steroid hormone receptor mRNAs in the brain of whiptail lizards. Journal of Neuroendocrinology 12: 559-606.

PDF 258. Turk Rhen and David Crews. 2000. Organization and activation of sexual and agonistic behavior in the leopard gecko, Eublepharis macularius. Neuroendocrinology 71: 252-261.

PDF 259. John Godwin, Roger Sawby, Robert R. Warner, David Crews, and Matthew S. Grober. 2000. Hypothalamic arginine vasotocin mRNA abundance variation across sexes and with sex change in a coral reef fish. Brian, Behavior, and Evolution 55: 77-84.

PDF 260. Turk Rhen, Jon T. Sakata, Mark Zeller, and David Crews. 2000. Sex steroid levels across the reproductive cycle of female leopard geckos, Eublepharis macularius, from different incubation temperatures. General and Comparative Endocrinology 118: 322-331.

PDF 261. Emily Willingham, Ryan Baldwin, James K. Skipper, and David Crews. 2000. Aromatase activity during embryogenesis in the brain and adrenal-kideny-gonad complex of the red-eared slider turtle, a species with temperature-dependent sex determination. General and Comparative Endocrinology 119: 202-207.

PDF 262. David Crews, Emily Willingham, and James K. Skipper. 2000. Endocrine disruptors: Present issues, future directions. The Quarterly Review of Biology 75: 243-260.

PDF 263. Jon Sakata, Patricia Coomber, F. Gonzalez-Lima, and David Crews. 2000. Functional connectivity among limbic brain areas: Differential effects of incubation temperature and gonadal sex in the leopard gecko, Eublepharis macularius. Brain, Behavior, and Reolution 55: 139-151.

PDF 264. Mary Beth Hawkins, Joseph W. Thornton, David Crews, James K. Skipper, Alyssa Dotte, and Peter Thomas. 2000. Identification of a third distinct estrogen receptor and reclassification of estrogen receptors in vertebrates. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 97: 10751-10756.

PDF 265. Emily Willingham and David Crews. 2000. The red-eared slider turtle: An animal model for the study of low doses and mixtures. American Zoologist 40: 421-429.

266. David Crews. 2000. Reply to Shine et al. Animal Behavior 59: F12.

PDF 267. Alice Fleming and David Crews. 2001. Estradiol and incubation temperature modulate regulation of steroidogenic factor 1 in the developing gonad of the red-eared slider turtle. Endocrinology 142: 1403-1411

PDF 268. Mary T. Mendonca and David Crews. 2001. Control of attractivity and receptivity in female red-sided garter snakes, Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis. Hormones and Behavior 40: 43-50.

PDF 269. Turk Rhen and David Crews. 2001. Distribution of androgen and estrogen receptor mRNA in the brian and reproductive tissues of the leapord gecko, Eublepharis macularius. Journal of Comparative Neurology 437: 385-397.

PDF 270. Jon T. Sakata, Ajay Gupta, and David Crews. 2001. Animal models of experiential effects on neural metabolism: plasticity in limbic circuits In Neuroplasticity, Development, and Steroid Hormone Action. R. Handa, S. Hayashi, E. Terasawa and M. Kawata (eds). CRC Press, Boca Raton. pp. 257-268.

PDF 271. David Crews. Cutting the gordian knot. 2001. Conservation Biology.15: 808-809

PDF 272. Turk Rhen and David Crews. 2001. Sex and gender. In Evolutionary Ecology. Perspective and Synthesis . C. W. Fox, D. A. Roff, and D.J. Fairbairn (eds). Oxford University Press, England pp. 154 – 166.

PDF 273. David Crews, Alice Fleming, Emily Willingham, Alan Baldwin, and James K. Skipper 2001. Role of steroidogenic factor 1 and aromatase in temperature-dependent sex determination in the red-eared slider turtle. Journal of Experimental Zoology 290: 597-606

PDF 274. Sarah Woolley, Jon T. Sakata, Ajay Gupta, and David Crews. 2001. Evolutionary changes in dopaminergic modulation of courtship behavoir in Cnemidophorus whiptail lizards. Hormones and Behavior 40: 483-489

PDF 275. Lainy Baird Day, David Crews, and Walter Wilczynski 2001. Effects of medial and dorsal cortex lesions on spatial memory in lizards. Behavioural Brain Research 118: 27-42

PDF 276. Jon T. Sakata, Ajay Gupta, Chien-Pei Chuang David Crews. 2002. Social experience affects territorial and reproductive behaviours in male leopard geckos, Eublepharis macularius. Animal Behaviour 63: 487-493

PDF 277. Jon T. Sakata, Ajay Gupta, F. Gonzalez-Lima David Crews. 2002. Repeated interactions with females elevate metabolic capacity in the limbic system of male rats. Brain Research 936: 27-37

PDF 278. Turk Rhen and David Crews. 2002. Variation in reproductive behavior within a sex: neural systems and endocrine activation. Journal of Neuroendocrinology 14: 517-532.

PDF 279. John Godwin and David Crews. 2002. Hormones, brain and behavior in reptiles in Hormones, Brain and Behavior. D. W. Pfaff, A. Arnold, A. Etgen, S. Fahrbach, R. Moss and R. Rubin. Academic Press, New York. pp. 545 – 585.

PDF 280. David Crews. 2002. Diversity and evolution of neuroendocrine mechanisms underlying reproductive behavior. In Behavioral Endocrinology, Second Edition. Jill Becker, S. Marc Breedlove, David Crews, and Martha McCarthy (eds.). M.I.T. Press, Cambridge. pp 223-288.

PDF 281. Margaret Mccarthy and David Crews. 2002. Molecular Approaches to Behavioral Neuroendocrinology. In Behavioral Endocrinology, Secon Edition. Jill Baker, S. Marc Breedlove, David Crews, and Martha McCarthy (eds.). M.I.T. Press, Cambridge. pp. 39-74.

PDF 282. Lance J. Kriegsfeld, Rae Silver, Andrea C. Gore, and David Crews. 2002. Vasoactive intestinal polypepitide contacts on gonadotropin-releasing hormone neurons increase in the developing female rats. Journal of Neuroendocrinology 14: 685-690.

PDF 283. Robert W. Gale, Judith M. Bergeron, Emily J. Willingham, and David Crews. 2002. Turtle sex determination assay: mass balance and responses to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin and 3,3′,4,4′,5-pentachlorobiphenyl. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 21: 2477-2482.

PDF 284. Jon T. Sakata, Ajay Gupta, F. Gonzalez-Lima, and David Crews. 2002. Heterosexual housing increases the retention of courtship behavior following castration and elevates metabolic capacity in the limbic brain nuclei in male whiptail lizards, Cnemidophorus inornatus. Hormones and Behavior 42: 263-273.

PDF 285. David Crews. 2003. Sex Determination: Where environment and genetics meet. Evolution and Development 5: 50-55.

PDF 286. Mary T. Mendonca, Dena Daniels, Constance Faro and David Crews. 2003. Differential effects of courtship and mating on receptivity and brain metabolism in female red-sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis). Behavioral Neuroscience 117: 144-9.

PDF 287. Jon T. Sakata, Sarah C. Wooley, Ajay Gupta and David Crews. 2003. Differential effects of testosterone and progesterone on the activation and retention of courtship behavior in sexual and parthenogenetic whiptail lizards. Hormones and Behavior 43: 523-30.

PDF 288. Turk Rhen, Jon T. Sakata, Sarah C. Woolly, Raymond Porter and David Crews. 2003. Changes in the androgen receptor mRNA expression in the forebrain and oviduct during the reproductive cycle of female leapord geckos. General and Comparative Endocrinology 132: 133-141.

PDF 289. David Crews. 2003. The development of phenotypic plasticity: Where biology and psychology meet. Developmental Psychobiology 43: 1-10.

PDF SUP 290. Joseph W. Thornton, Eleanor Need and David Crews. 2003. Resurrecting the ancestral steroid receptor: Ancient origin of estrogen signaling. Science 301: 1714-1718.

PDF 291. Matthew P. Longnecker, David C. Bellinger, David Crews, Brenda Eskenazi, Ellen K. Silbergeld, Tracey J. Woodruff, Ezra S. Susser. 2003. An approach to assessment of endocrine disruption in the national children’s study. Environmental Health Perspectives 111: 1691-1697.

PDF 292. Kira L. Wennstrom , Cynthia J. Gill and David Crews. 2003. Sex differences in estrogen-induced progesterone and estrogen receptor mRNA in the ventromedial hypothalamus of hatchling whiptail lizards. Developmental Brain Research 145: 151-157.

PDF 293. Jon T. Sakata. and David Crews. 2003. Embryonic temperature shapes behavioral change following social experience in male leopard geckos Eublepharis macularious . Animal Behavior 66: 839-846.

PDF 294. David Crews, Oliver Putz, Peter Thomas, Tyrone Hayes, Kembra Howdeshell. 2003. Wildlife as models for study of how mixtures, low doses, and the embryonic environment modulate the action of endocrine disrupting chemicals. Pure and Applied Chemistry 75: 2305-2320.

PDF 295. Sarah C. Woolley, Jon T. Sakata, and David Crews. 2004. Tracing the evolution of brain and behavior. ILAR journal 45: 46-53.

PDF 296. David Crews, Cynthia J. Gill, and Kira L. Wemmstrom. 2004. Sexually dimorphic regulation of estrogen receptor at mRNA in the ventromedial hypothalamus of adult whiptail lizard is testosterone dependent. Brain Research 1004: 136-141.

PDF 297. Jon T. Sakata and David Crews. 2004. Developmental sculpting of social phenotype and plasticity. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews 28: 95-112.

PDF 298. Sarah C. Woolley and David Crews. 2004. Species differences in the regulation of tyrosine hydroxylase in cnemidophorus whiptail lizard. Journal of Neurobiology 60: 360-368.

PDF 299. Sarah C. Woolley, Jon T. Sakata and David Crews. 2004. Tyrosine hydroxylase expression is affected by sexual vigor and social environment in male cnemidophorus inornatus. Journal of Comparative Neurology 476: 429-439.

PDF 300. Jon T. Sakata and David Crews. 2004. Cytochrome oxidase activity in the preoptic area correlates with differences in sexual behavior of the intact and castrated male leopord geckos (Eublepharis macularis) Behavioral Neuroscience 118: 857-862.

PDF 301. David Crews, Trevon Fuller, Elsa G. Mirasol, Donald W. Peaff, and Sonoko Ogawa. 2004. Postnatal environment affects behavior of adult transgenic mice. Experimental Biology and Medicine 229: 935-939.

PDF 302. Sarah C. Woolley, Jon T. Sakata, and David Crews. 2004. Evolutionary insights into the regulation of courtship behavior in male amphibians and reptiles. Psysiology and Behavior 83: 347-360.

PDF 303. Nora Edwards, Lance Kriegsfeld and David Crews. 2004. Neural substrates for sexual and thermoregulatory behavior in the male leopard gecko Eublepharis macularius. Brain Research 1029: 77-83.

PDF 304. Jon T. Sakata, David Crews and F. Gonzalez-Lima. 2005. Behavioral correlates of differences in neural metabolic capacity. Brain Research Reviews 48: 1-15.

PDF 305. Melissa M. Holmes, Oliver Putz, David Crews and Juli Wade. 2005. Normally occuring intersexuality and testosterone induced plasticity in the copulatory system of adult leapord geckos. Hormones and Behavior 47: 439-445.

PDF 306. Trevon Fuller, Sahotra Sarkar and David Crews. 2005. The use of norms of reaction to analyze genotypic and environmental influences on behavior in mice and rats.Neuroscience and Behavioral Reviews 29: 4445-456.

PDF 307. Nicholas S.R. Sanderson, Erik Weissler and David Crews. 2005. The nitric oxide synthase inhibitor L-name supresses androgen – induced male like pseudocopulatory behavior in whiptail lizards. Brain Research 1052: 236-239.

PDF 308. Turk Rhen, Jon T. Sakata and David Crews. 2005. Effects of gonadal sex and incubation temperature on the ontogeny of gonadal steroid concentration and secondary sex structures in leopard geckos Eublepharis macularious. General and Comparative Endocrinology 142: 289-296.

PDF 309. M.B. Hawkins, J. Godwin, D. Crews and P. Thomas. 2005. The distribution of the duplicate oestrogen receptors ER-Ba and ER-Bb in the forebrain of the Atlantic croaker ( Micropogonias undulatus ). Proceedings Of The Royal Society 272: 633-641.

PDF 310. David Crews . 2005. Evolution of neuroendocrine mechnisms that regulate sexual behavior. Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism 16: 354-361.

PDF 311. David Crews and Michael C. Moore. 2005.Historical contributions of research on reptiles to behavioral neuroendocrinology. Hormones and Behavior 48: 384-394.

PDF 312. William S. Modi and David Crews. 2005. Sex chromosomes and sex determination in reptiles. Current Opinion in Genetics and Development 15: 660-665.

PDF 313. David Crews and A.G.G. Groothuis. 2005. Tinbergen’s Fourth Question: Ontogeny. Animal Biology 55: 343-370.

PDF 314. Oliver Putz and David Crews. 2006. Embryonic origin of mate choice in a lizard with temperature-dependent sex determination. Developmental Psychobiology 48: 29-38.

PDF 315. Sarah C. Woolley, Bert O’ Malley, John Lydon and David Crews. 2006. Genotype differences in behavior and tyrosine hydroxylase expression between wild-type and progesterone receptor knockout mice. Behavioural Brain Research 167: 197-204.

PDF 316. David Crews and John McLachlan. 2006. Epigenetics, evolution, endocrine disruption, health, and disease. Endocrinology 147(Supplement): S4 – S10.

PDF 317. Kathleen S. Lynch, David Crews, Michael J. Ryan, and Wlater Wilczynski. 2006. Hormonal state inf luences aspects of female mate choice in the Túngara Frog (Physalaemus pustulosus). Hormones and Behavior 49: 450-457.

PDF 318. Nicholas S.R. Sanderson, Brandon D. Le and David Crews. 2006. Testosterone induction of male-typical sexual behavior Is associated with increased preoptic NADPH diaphorase and citrulline production in female whiptail lizards. Journal of Neurobiology 66: 1156-1163.

PDF 319. Kimberly Hillsman, Nicholas Sanderson and David Crews. 2006. Testosterone Stimulates Mounting Behavior and Arginine Vasotocin Expression in the Brain of Both Sexual and Unisexual Whiptail Lizards. Sexual Development 1: 77 – 84.

PDF 320. Brian Dias and David Crews. 2006. Serotonergic modulation of male-like pseudocopulatory behavior in the parthenogenetic whiptail lizard, Cnemidophorus uniparens. Hormones and Behavior 50: 401-409.

PDF 321. David Crews, Wendy Lou, Alison Fleming, and Sonoko Ogawa. 2006. From gene networks underlying sex determination and gonadal differentiation to the development of neural networks regulating sociosexual behavior. Brain Research 1126: 109 – 121.

PDF 322. T. Rhen, D. Crews, A. Fivizzani and P. Elf. 2006. Reproductive tradeoffs and yolf steroids in female leopard geckos Eublepharis Macularius. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 19:1819-29

PDF 323. Christina Shoemaker, Mary Ramsey, Joanna Queen and David Crews. 2007. Expression of Sox9, Mis, and Dmrt1 in the Gonad of a Species With Temperature-Dependent Sex Determination. Developmental Dynamics 236: 1055 – 1063.

PDF 324. David Crews, Andrea Gore, Timothy Hsu, Nygerma Dangleben, Michael Spinetta, Timothy Schallert, Matthew Anway and Michael Skinner. 2007. Transgenerational epigenetic imprints on male preference. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science(104) 14: 5042 – 5046.

PDF 325. Mary Ramsey, Christina Shoemaker, and David Crews. 2007. Gonadal expression of Sf1 and aromatase during sex determination in the red-eared slider turtle (Trachemys scripta), a reptile with temperature-dependent sex determination. Differentiation. 75:978-991.

PDF 326. Mary Ramsey and David Crews. 2007. Steroid signaling system responds differently to temperature and hormone manipulation in the red-eared slider turtle (Trachemys scripta elegans) , a reptile with temperature-dependent sex determination. Sexual Development 14: 181 – 196.

PDF 327. Mary Ramsey and David Crews. 2007. Adrenal–kidney–gonad complex measurements may not predict gonad-specific changes in gene expression patterns during temperature- dependent sex determination in the red-eared slider turtle (Trachemys scripta elegans). Journal of Experimental Zoology 307A: 1-8.

PDF 328. John T. Cacioppo, David G. Amaral, Jack J. Blanchard, Judy L. Cameron, C. Sue Carter, David Crews, Susan Fiske, Todd Heatherton, Marcia K. Johnson, Michael J. Kozak, Robert W. Levenson, Catherine Lord, Earl K. Miller, Kevin Ochsner, Marcus E. Raichle, M. Tracie Shea, Shelley E. Taylor, Larry J. Young, and Kevin J. Quinn. 2007. Social Neuroscience: Progress and Implications for Mental Health. Perspectives on Psychological Science 2: 99-123. Epub

PDF 329. Brian George Dias, Ramona Sousan Ataya, David Rushworth, Jun Zhao, David Crews 2007. Effect of incubation temperature and androgens on dopaminergic activity in the leopard gecko, Eublepharis macularius 67:630-636. Developmental Neurobiology.

PDF 330. R. Nicolle Matthews, Michael Domjan, Mary Ramsey and David Crews. 2007. Learning effects on sperm competition and reproductive fitness. Psychological Science 18:758-762.

PDF 331. Christina Shoemaker, Joanna Queen, and David Crews. 2007. Response of candidate sex-determining genes to changes in temperature reveals their involvement in the molecular network underlying temperature-dependent sex determination. Molecular Endocrinology 21:2750-2763.

PDF 332. Turk Rhen and David Crews. 2007. Why are there two sexes? In Sex on the Brain: From Genes to Behavior (eds. Jill B. Becker, Karen Berkley, Nori Geary, Elizabeth Hampson, James Herman, and Elizabeth Young). Oxford University Press.

PDF 333. Nicholas Sanderson, Brandon Le, Zifei Zhou, and David Crews. 2008. Preoptic neuronal nitric oxide synthase induction by testosterone is constistant with a role in gating male copulatory behavior. European Journal of Neuroscience. Epub

PDF 334. David Crews. 2008. Epigenetics and its Implications for Behavioral Neuroendocrinology. Frontiers in Neuroendocrinology. 29:344-357.

PDF 335. David Crews and James J. Bull. 2008. Some like it hot (and some don’t). Nature 451:527-528

PDF 336. Nicholas S. R. Sanderson and David Crews. 2009. Hormones and behavior. In The New Encyclopedia of Neuroscience (eds. Larry Squire, Tom Albright, Floyd Bloom, Fred Gage and Nick Spitzer) 4:1207-1215

PDF 337. Brian G. Dias and David Crews. Regulation of Pseudosexual Behavior in the Parthenogenetic Whiptail Lizard, Cnemidophorus uniparens. Endocrinology. Epub.

PDF 338. Victoria Huang, Jon Sakata, Turk Rhen, Patricia Coomber, Sarah Simmonds and David Crews. Constraints on temperature-dependent sex determination in the leopard gecko (Eublepharis macularius): response to Kratochvil et al. Naturwissenschaften.

PDF 339. Craig A Smith, Christina M Shoemaker, Kelly N Roeszler, Joanna Queen, David Crews, and Andrew H Sinclair. Cloning and expression of R-Spondin1 in different vertebrates suggests a conserved role in ovarian development BMC Development. 8:72

PDF 340. Christina M Shoemaker and David Crews. 2009. Analyzing the Coordinated Gene Network Underlying Temperature-Dependent Sex Determination in Reptiles. Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology.Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology.20: 293–303.

PDF 341. Mary Ramsey and David Crews. 2009. Steroid Signaling and Temperature-Dependent Sex Determination – Reviewing the Evidence for Early Action of Estrogen during Ovarian Determination in Turtles. Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology. 20: 283–292.

PDF 342. Michael K. Skinner, Matthew D. Anway, Marina I. Savenkova1, Andrea C. Gore, and David Crews. 2008. Transgenerational Epigenetic Programming of the Brain Transcriptome and Anxiety Behavior. PLoS ONE 3(11):e3745

PDF 343. Brian G. Dias, Sonia G. Chin, and David Crews. 2009. Steroidogenic enzyme gene expression in the brain of the parthenogenetic whiptail lizard, Cnemidophorus uniparens. Brain research.1253: 129-138.

PDF 344. David Crews and James J. Bull. 2009. Mode and Tempo in Environmental Sex Determination in Vertebrates. Seminars in Cell and Developmental Biology. 20:251–255.

PDF 345. David Crews, Nicholas S. R. Sanderson, and Brian G. Dias. 2009. Hormones, Brain, and Behavior in Reptiles. Hormones, Brain and Behavior, 2nd edition, Vol 2. Academic Press;771-816.

PDF 346. Andrea C. Gore and David Crews. 2009. Environmental Endocrine Disruption of Brain and Behavior. Hormones, Brain and Behavior, 2nd edition, Vol 3. Academic Press; 1789-1816.

PDF 347. David Crews, David Rushworth1, Francisco Gonzalez-Lima, and Sonoko Ogawa. 2009. Litter Environment Affects Behavior and Brain Metabolic Activity of Adult Knockout Mice. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience. Vol 3 (12): doi:10.3389/neuro.08.012.2009

PDF 348. Rosemary F. Bachvarova, Brian I. Crother, Katia Manova, Jodie Chatfield, Christina M. Shoemaker, David P. Crews, and Andrew D. Johnson. 2009. Expression of Dazl and Vasa in turtle embryos and ovaries: evidence for inductive specification of germ cells. Evolution and Development. 11(5): 525-534.

PDF 349. David Crews. 2010. Neural Control of Sexual Behavior. Encyclopedia of Animal Behavior, vol. 2, pp. 541-548.

PDF 350. Christina M. Shoemaker-Daly, Kyle Jackson, Ryohei Yatsu, Yuiko Matsumoto and David Crews. 2010. The genetic network underlying temperature-dependent sex determination is endogenously regulated by temperature in isolated cultured Trachemys scripta gonads. Developmental Dynamics. 239(4):1061-1075.

PDF 351. David Crews. 2010. Epigenetics, brain, behavior, and the environment. HORMONES. 9(1):41-50.

PDF 352. Cynthia B. de Medeiros1, Stephanie L. Rees1, Maheleth Llinas1, Alison S. Fleming1, and David Crews. 2010. Deconstructing Early Life Experiences: Distinguishing the Contributions of Prenatal and Postnatal Factors to Adult Male Sexual Behavior in the Rat. Psychological Science. 21(10):1494– 1501.

PDF 353. Rhen, T., Schroeder, A., Sakata, J.T., Huang, V., and Crews, D. 2010. Segregating variation for temperature-dependent sex determination in a lizard. Heredity.106(4):649-660.

PDF 354. Paul S. Cook, Liz Simond, Melissa A. Cimafranca, Andrea C. Gore, and David Crews. 2010. Environmental endocrine disruptors and male reproductive toxicology. In Comprehensive Toxicology, 2nd edition (ed. Charlene A. McQueen). Elsevier, London. Pp. 231-246.

PDF 355. Frederick S. vom Saal, Benson T. Akingbemi, Scott M. Belcher, David A. Crain, David Crews, Linda C. Guidice, Patricia A. Hunt, Csaba Leranth, John Peterson Myers, Angel Nadal, Nicholas Olea, Vasantha Padmanabhan,a Cheryl S. Rosenfeld, Alan Schneyer, Gilbert Schoenfelder, Carlos Sonnenschein, Ana M. Soto, Richard W. Stahlhut, Shanna H. Swan,g Laura N. Vandenberg, Hong-Sheng Wang,Cheryl S. Watson, Wade V. Welshons, and Robert T. Zoellerl. Flawed Experimental Design Reveals the Need for Guidelines Requiring Appropriate Positive Controls in Endocrine Disruption Research. Toxicological sciences. 115(2), 612–613.

PDF 356. David Crews. 2011. Epigenetic modifications of brain and behavior: Theory and practice. Hormones and Behavior. 59: 393–398.

PDF 357. Lauren A. O’Connell, Bryan J. Matthews, Sagar B. Patel, Jeremy D. O’Connell, and David Crews. 2011. Molecular characterization and brain distribution of the progesterone receptor in whiptail lizards. General and Comparative Endocrinology. 171: 64–74.

PDF 358. Lauren A. O’Connell, Bryan J. Matthews, and David Crews. 2011. Neuronal Nitric Oxide Synthase as a Substrate for the Evolution of Pseudosexual Behaviour in a Parthenogenetic Whiptail Lizard. Journal of Neuroendocrinology. 23: 244–253.

PDF 359. David Crews and Andrea C. Gore. 2011. Life Imprints: Living in a Contaminated World. Environmental Health Perspectives. 119(9):1208-1210.

PDF 360. Yuiko Matsumoto and David Crews. 2012. Molecular mechanisms of temperature-dependent sex determination in the context of ecological developmental biology. Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology. 354: 103–110.

PDF 361. David Crews, Ross Gillette, Samuel V. Scarpino, Mohan Manikkam, Marina I. Savenkova, and Michael K. Skinner. 2012. Epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of altered stress responses. PNAS. 109 (23): 9143–9148.

PDF 362. Victoria Huang and David Crews. 2012. Differences induced by incubation temperature, versus androgen manipulation, in male leopard geckos (Eublepharis macularius). Physiology & Behavior. 107: 121–124.

PDF 363. David Crews and Andrea C. Gore. 2012. Epigenetic synthesis: a need for a new paradigm for evolution in a contaminated world. F1000 Biology Reports. 4:18.

PDF 364. David Crews. 2012. The (bi)sexual brain. Science & Society Series on Sex and Science. EMBO reports. 13(9):779-784.

PDF 365. Lauren A. O’Connell, M. M. Mitchell, Hanns Hofmann, and David Crews. 2012. Androgens coordinate neurotransmitter-related gene expression in male whiptail lizards. Genes, Brain and Behavior. 11: 813–818.

PDF 366. Schug, T.T., R. Abagyan, B. Blumberg, T.J. Collins, D. Crews, P.L. DeFur, S.M. Dickerson, T.M. Edwards, A.C. Gore, L.J. Guillette, T. Hayes, J.J. Heindel, A.R. Moores, H.B. Patisaul, T.L. Tal, K.A. Thayer, L.N. Vandenberg, J. Warner, C.S. Watson, F.S. vom Saal, R.T. Zoeller, K.P. O’Brien, and J.P. Myers. 2012. Designing endocrine disruption out of the next generation of chemicals. Green Chemistry. (DOI: 10.1039/c2gc35055f).

PDF 367. Victoria Huang, Rachel M. Bowden, David Crews. 2013. Yolk-albumen testosterone in a lizard with temperature-dependent sex determination: Relation with development.General and Comparative Endocrinology 186: 67–71.

PDF 368. David Crews. 2013. Binary Outputs from Unitary Networks: Integrative and Comparative Biology, pp. 1–7.

PDF 369. Yuiko Matsumoto, Ryohei Yatsu, Caitlin Taylor and David Crews. 2013. Changes in gonadal gene network by exogenous ligands in temperaturedependent sex determination.Journal of Molecular Endocrinology: 50:3 389–400.

PDF 370. Yuiko Matsumoto, Alvin Buemio, Randy Chu, Mozhgon Vafaee, David Crews. 2013. Epigenetic Control of Gonadal Aromatase (cyp19a1) in Temperature-Dependent Sex Determination of RedEared Slider Turtles. PLoS One. 8(6).e63599.

PDF 371. David Crews. 2013. Animal Personalities: Behavior, Physiology, and Evolution. Integrative and Comparative Biology, pp. 1–3 doi:10.1093/icb/ict095.

PDF 372. Charles W. Schmidt (an Interview to David Crews). 2013. Uncertain Inheritance Transgenerational Effects of Environmental Exposures. Environmental Health Perspectives: volume 121 (10).

PDF 373. A.C. Gore, J. Balthazart, D. Bikle, D.O. Carpenter, D. Crews, P. Czernichow, E. Diamanti-Kandarakis, R.M. Dores, D. Grattan, P.R. Hof, A.N. Hollenberg, C. Lange, A.V. Lee, J.E. Levine, R.P. Millar, R.J. Nelson, M. Porta, M. Poth, D.M. Power, G.S. Prins, E.C. Ridgway, E.F. Rissman, J.A. Romijn, P.E. Sawchenko, P.D. Sly, O. Söder, H.S. Taylor, M. Tena-Sempere, H. Vaudry, K. Wallen, Z. Wang, L. Wartofsky, and C.S. Watson. 2013. Policy Decisions on Endocrine Disruptors Should Be Based on Science Across Disciplines: A Response to Dietrich et al.Endocrinology. doi:10.1210/en.2013-1854.

PDF 374. Per Södersten, David Crews, Cheryl Logan, and Rudolf Werner Soukup. 2014. Eugen Steinach – the First Neuroendocrinologist. Endocrinology.155: 688-702. doi:10.1210/en.2013-1816.

PDF 375. David Crews. Epigenetics and animal behavior. 2013. In K. Yasukawa (ed.) Animal Behavior, Volume I: Causation and Development of Animal Behavior. Praeger Publishers. Pp. 263-287.

PDF 376. David Crews and Andrea Gore. 2014. Chapter 26. Transgenerational Epigenetics: Current Controversies and Debates. Transgenerational Epigenetics. Elsevier. Pp. 371-387.

PDF 377. Michael K Skinner, Marina I Savenkova , Bin Zhang , Andrea C Gore and David Crews. 2014. Gene bionetworks involved in the epigenetic transgenerational inheritance of altered mate preference: environmental epigenetics and evolutionary biology. BMC Genomics 15:377

PDF 378. David Crews, Ross Gillette, Isaac Miller-Crews, Andrea C. Gore, Michael K. Skinner. 2014. Nature, nurture and epigenetics. Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology.doi: 10.1016/j.mce.2014.07.013.

PDF 379. Warren W. Burggren1 and David Crews. 2014. Epigenetics in Comparative Biology: Why We Should Pay Attention. Integrative and Comparative Biology, volume 54, number 1, pp. 7–20 doi:10.1093/icb/icu013.

PDF 380. Yuiko Matsumoto, Brette Hannigan, David Crews. 2014. Embryonic PCB exposure alters phenotypic, genetic, and epigenetic profiles in turtle sex determination, a biomarker of environmental contamination. Endocrinology. doi: 10.1210/en.2014-1404.

PDF 381. Ross Gillette, Isaac Miller-Crews, Eric E. Nilsson, Michael K. Skinner, Andrea C. Gore, and David Crews. 2014. Sexually Dimorphic Effects of Ancestral Exposure to Vinclozolin on Stress Reactivity in Rats. Endocrinology. doi: 10.1210/en.2014-1253.

PDF 382. Samuel V Scarpino, Ross Gillette, and David Crews. 2014. multiDimBio: An R Package for the Design, Analysis, and Visualization of Systems Biology Experiments. arXiv:1404.0594v1 [q-bio.QM].

PDF 383. Victoria Huang, Hugh C. Hemmings JR, and David Crews. 2014. Sociosexual Investigation in Sexually Experienced, Hormonally Manipulated Male Leopard Geckos: Relation With Phosphorylated DARPP-32 in Dopaminergic Pathways.J. Exp. Zool.Epub.

PDF 384. David Crews and Andrea Gore. 2014. Transgenerational Epigenetics: Current Controversies and Debates. In Transgenerational Epigenetics: Evidence And Debate, T. Tollefsbol (Editor). Academic Press, Elsevier Press. Pp. 371-391.

PDF 385. Andrea C. Gore, David Crews, Loretta Doan, Michele La Merrill, Heather Patisaul, Ami Zota. 2014. Introduction to EDCs: A guide for public interest organizations and policy-makers. Strategic Approach to International Chemicals Management (SAICM), IPEN, and The Endocrine Society.

PDF 386. Ross Gillette, Isaac Miller-Crews, Michael K. Skinner, David Crews. 2015. Distinct actions of ancestral vinclozolin and juvenile stress on neural gene expression in the male rat. Frontiers in Genetics.6.56. doi: 10.3389/fgene.2015.00056.

PDF 387. Michael P. Reilly, Connor D.Weeks, Viktoria Y. Topper, Lindsay M. Thompson, David Crews, Andrea C. Gore. 2015. The effects of prenatal PCBs on adult social behavior in rats. Hormones and Behavior 73. 47–55

PDF 388. David Crews, Seth A Weisberg, Sahotra Sarkar. 2015. Hazards inherent in interdisciplinary behavioral research. Frontiers in Zoology, 12.

PDF 389. Anne Fausto-Sterling, David Crews, Jihyun Sung, Cynthia García-Coll, and Ronald Seifer. 2015. Multimodal Sex-Related Differences in Infant and in Infant-Directed Maternal Behaviors During Months Three Through Twelve of Development. Developmental Psychology. Advance online publication. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/dev0000033.

PDF 390. David Crews and Robert J. Noone. 2015. Epigenetic modifications and the shaping of brain and behavior. In The Family Emotional System. An integrative concept of theory, science, and practice. Robert J. Noone and Daniel V. Papero (Editors). Lexington Books, Lanham. Pp. 87-101.

PDF 391. David Kabelik and David Crews. Hormones, brain, and behavior in reptiles. In Hormones, Brain, and Behavior, Third Edition, Volume II. (eds. D.W. Pfaff, A. Arnold, J. Balthazart, and R. Rubin). Academic Press, New York.

PDF 392. Heather Patisaul, Andrea Gore, David Crews. 2017. Hormones Brain and Behavior. Third Edition: 63-88

PDF 393. Yuiko Matsumoto, Brette Hannigan, David Crews. 2016. Temperature shift alters DNA methylation and histone modification patterns in gonadal aromatase (Cyp19a1) gene in species with temperature-dependent sex determination. PLoS ONE. 11(11).

PDF 394. Ross Gillette, Michael P. Reilly, Viktoria Topper, Lindsay Thompson, David Crews, Andrea C. Gore. 2017. Anxiety-like behaviors in adulthood are altered in male but not female rats exposed to low dosages of polychlorinated biphneyls in utero. Hormones and Behavior, 87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yhbeh.2016.10.011

PDF 395. Yuiko Matsumoto, David Crews. 2017. Genetic polymorphisms in aromatase (cyp19a1) are not associated with gonadal phenotypes in red-eared slider turtle hatchlings developed at a pivotal temperature. Sexual Development. Supplemental Data.

PDF 396. Andrea C. Gore, Amanda M. Holley, David Crews. 2017. Mate choice, sexual selection, and endocrine-disrupting chemicals. Hormones and Behavior.

PDF 397. Michael P. Reilly, Connor D. Weeks, David Crews, Andrea C. Gore. 2018. Application of a novel social choice paradigm to assess effects of prenatal endocrine-disrupting chemical exposure in rats. Journal of Comparative Psychology 132: 253-267. DOI: 1037/com0000103.

PDF 398. Krishnan K, Mittal N, Thompson LM, Rodriguez-Santiago M, Duvauchelle CL, Crews D, Gore AC. 2018. Effects of the endocrine-disrupting chemicals, vinclozolin and PCBs, on physiological and sociosexual phenotypes in F2 generation Sprague-Dawley rats. Environmental Health Perspectives 26: 97005. doi: 10.1289/EHP3550

PDF 399. Viktoria Topper, Lauren Wagner, Michael Reilly, Lindsay Thomson, Ross Gillette, Steven Phelps, David Crews, and Andrea Gore. 2019. Social and neuromolecular phenotypes are programmed by prenatal exposures to endocrine-disrupting chemicals. Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology Jan 5;479:133-146. PMID: 30287398, DOI: 1016/j.mce.2018.09.010.

PDF 400. Ross Gillette, Min Ji Son, Lexi Ton, Andrea C. Gore, David Crews. 2018. Passing experiences on to future generations: Endocrine disruptors and transgenerational inheritance of epimutations in brain and sperm. Epigenetics.

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