Numerous chemicals released into the environment can interfere with normal, hormonally regulated biological processes to adversely affect development and/or reproductive function in wildlife and humans. Due to the ability of these chemicals to interfere with the endocrine systems, they have been labeled as endocrine disruptors (EDs). SARs and QSARs are powerful screening tools to detect potential EDs and to prioritize them for more intensive and costly evaluations based on in vitro and in vivo assays. In this context, androgen-receptor binding data (active/inactive) for a large set of about 200 structurally diverse chemicals, described by CODESSA descriptors encoding topological and physicochemical properties, were used for deriving structu...