“…During this period, multiple large-scale efforts were made to create databases of hormetic dose responses using very rigorous a priori entry and evaluative criteria for the assessment of hormetic dose responses in the biological and biomedical literature [16,17,18,19,20]. In addition, detailed and systematic assessments were made of the history of the dose response to better understand the scientific development of dose response concepts and how judgements were rendered concerning which dose response models would be adopted by the scientific, medical and regulatory communities [9,21]. As a result of these efforts, it was learned that the biphasic dose response was commonly reported in the biological and biomedical literature, that it is highly generalizable, being widely reported in plants, microbes, invertebrates and vertebrates, including humans [15,22,23].…”