Title of article :
Estimation of no effect concentrations from exposure experiments when values scatter among individuals
Author/Authors :
Baas، نويسنده , , J. and Jager، نويسنده , , T. and Kooijman، نويسنده , , S.A.L.M.، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The parameters that are most commonly used in risk assessment, LCx values or no observed effect concentrations, both have serious drawbacks. As an alternative, No effect concentrations (NEC) as a parameter in a process-based model, offer great potential in risk assessment.
estimates of the NEC assume that all individuals have the same NEC, but it is to be expected that organism differ in their physiology and therefore individuals in a cohort do not all have the same value for the NEC. We investigated how much variation in the NEC is allowed before an estimate of a NEC from a survival experiment fails. We therefore assumed that each individual organism has its own NEC, drawn independently from a log-normal distribution around a mean NEC. In addition we also investigated if the standard deviation in the log-normal distribution itself could be estimated from a survival experiment.
wed that for a wide range of individual differences in the NEC the estimates of the NEC are accurate and precise. Only if the differences between individuals become much larger than what could be derived from survival experiments reported in the open literature the estimated NEC becomes unreliable. The standard deviation in the log-normal distribution of the NEC can also be estimated but with a high uncertainty.
standard model is used where all exposed individuals have the same NEC on data where there is a different NEC for individuals, the NEC can still be estimated with high accuracy and precision.
Keywords :
Monte Carlo simulation , TOXICITY , Survival , Individual tolerance distribution , No effect concentration
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics