“…Although minimal or nonsignificant teratogenic effects on the CNS have been reported (Hoyer et al, 2012; Wiley et al, 1992; Yu et al, 1993), it appears that the specific parameters of the applied field (i.e., waveform) may be one of the most important factors to consider in the study of teratogenesis. For instance, sinusoidal or square‐wave pulses can be harmful to CNS growth and development but typically require field strengths on the order of a millitesla or higher to produce reliable effects (Gona et al, 1993; Juutilainen et al, 1986; Lahijani et al, 2011; Sikov et al, 1984; Ubeda et al, 1983). In contrast, we have found that wave‐form patterns whose intrinsic shapes (often asymmetric or irregular pulse patterns) and interstimulus intervals have been designed to simulate common physiological or naturalistic phenomena can also be effective in altering the development of the rat brain even when applied at flux densities several magnitudes lower (<1 μT) (McKay and Persinger, 1999; McKay et al, 2003; St‐Pierre et al, 2008; St‐Pierre and Persinger, 2003, 2008; Whissell et al, 2009).…”