[Audio] Based on the review by Quagliato et al., my poster focuses on maternal immune activation (MIA) and anxiety in offspring. As explained in the introduction, MIA is related to the idea that the offspring of pregnant women could develop psychiatric disorders. Quagliato et al. explains the biological side of this. MIA develops as the Glia cells and neurons proliferate and migrate, causing cell death and disturbed brain development. My first thought about this article was that it mainly focused on the biology of MIA. There would need to be an equal focus on biology and psychology for a fair analysis. The first objective was to measure levels of anxiety behaviour within dams exposed to MIA compared to those that were not. Another objective was to measure the time offspring spent in the open arms of the plus Maze test when exposed to MIA compared to those that were not. Just like the introduction, I feel the article focuses more on anxiety than on depression, and to get a complete evaluation, you would need both included. Within the article, two independent reviewers conducted a systematic meta-analysis review, showing which studies were done by which rat species. Each combination had rats exposed to MIA and rats that were not, which then concluded a "Neurological outcome in adulthood". The primary study was the "plus maze test", testing how long the rodents were in the open arms of the plus maze test. Figure 1 in the poster explains this. The results of this study are in Figure 2; with these results, the researchers can now move forward. One strength of the article is that it is easy to follow and has all the necessary information. However, a weakness is that I do not think all the information needed to come to a complete and concise conclusion is available, such as studies and evidence to prove or disprove the relevance of depression and psychology within the condition. In the future, researchers want to progress their scientific study from animal models to human models. Lastly I think if they were to add psychology and depression it would become a very good piece of research to use in the future..