de Tommaso M et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed 10 healthy volunteers to 900 MHz GSM cell phone signals and measured brain electrical activity using event-related potentials. Both active phones and sham phones (with electromagnetic power dissipated internally) reduced brain arousal responses compared to phones that were completely off. This suggests cell phone exposure affects brain electrical activity and attention processing.
Habash RW et al · 2009
This comprehensive review examined radiofrequency research from 2004-2007, analyzing studies on mobile phones, wireless networks, and RF health effects including cancer, neurological impacts, and biological changes. The authors concluded there was no clear evidence of adverse health effects from RF fields during this period, though they recommended continued research especially regarding children's mobile phone use.
van Rongen E et al · 2009
This comprehensive review examined how radiofrequency electromagnetic fields from mobile phones affect the human nervous system. While researchers found some minor changes in brain wave patterns (EEG) during GSM phone signal exposure, these changes were not linked to any health problems. Studies consistently showed no significant effects on hearing, balance, or cognitive performance in adults or children.
Rağbetli MC, Aydinlioğlu A, Koyun N, Rağbetli C, Karayel M · 2009
Researchers exposed pregnant mice to mobile phone radiation throughout pregnancy and then examined brain cell counts in their offspring's hippocampus (the brain region crucial for memory and learning). They found no significant difference in the number of pyramidal cells between exposed and unexposed offspring. However, the study lacked important details about exposure levels and duration, making it difficult to assess how these findings relate to human mobile phone use.
Eltiti S et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed 88 people (including those who reported electromagnetic sensitivity) to cell tower signals for 50 minutes while testing their memory, attention, and heart rate. The study found no differences in cognitive performance or physiological measures between real exposure and fake exposure sessions. This suggests that brief exposure to typical cell tower radiation levels doesn't immediately impair thinking or basic body functions.
Rağbetli MC, Aydinlioğlu A, Koyun N, Rağbetli C, Karayel M. · 2009
Researchers exposed pregnant mice to mobile phone radiation and examined whether it affected brain cell development in their offspring, specifically counting pyramidal cells in the hippocampus (a brain region crucial for memory and learning). They found no significant difference in brain cell numbers between exposed and unexposed mouse pups. While this suggests no developmental harm at the exposure levels tested, the researchers noted that more studies are needed given widespread mobile phone use around pregnant women.
Eltiti S et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed 88 people (including those who claimed to be sensitive to electromagnetic fields) to cell tower signals for 50 minutes while they performed memory and attention tests. The study found no effects on cognitive performance or physiological measures like heart rate and skin conductance in either sensitive or control participants. This suggests that short-term exposure to typical cell tower radiation levels doesn't impair brain function or cause detectable physical responses.
Abramson MJ et al. · 2009
Researchers studied 317 Australian teenagers to see if mobile phone use affected their thinking abilities. They found that teens who made more phone calls had faster but less accurate responses on cognitive tests, with poorer working memory and learning performance. Importantly, the same effects occurred with text messaging, suggesting the changes came from phone usage habits rather than radiofrequency radiation exposure.
Narayanan SN, Kumar RS, Potu BK, Nayak S, Mailankot M. · 2009
Researchers exposed rats to mobile phone signals for 4 weeks (50 missed calls daily) and then tested their ability to navigate a water maze to find a hidden platform. The phone-exposed rats took three times longer to find the target area and spent half as much time in the correct location compared to unexposed rats. This suggests that mobile phone radiation may impair spatial memory and learning abilities.
Luria R, Eliyahu I, Hareuveny R, Margaliot M, Meiran N. · 2009
Israeli researchers tested how cell phone radiation affects thinking speed by having 48 men perform memory tasks while GSM phones were placed on different sides of their heads. They found that when the phone was on the left side of the head, participants responded significantly slower with their right hand during the first few minutes of exposure. This suggests cell phone radiation can temporarily impair cognitive performance, and that the specific placement of the phone and timing of exposure matter for detecting these effects.
López-Martín E et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed rats to GSM cell phone radiation (the type used in mobile phones) and found it specifically amplified brain activity in animals already prone to seizures. The pulse-modulated radiation from GSM signals affected different brain regions than continuous radiation, particularly areas involved in memory and emotion processing. This suggests that the specific pulsing pattern of cell phone signals may have unique effects on brain function, especially in vulnerable individuals.
Daniels WM, Pitout IL, Afullo TJ, Mabandla MV. · 2009
Researchers exposed rats to electromagnetic radiation in the mobile phone frequency range and tested their behavior, brain structure, and stress hormone levels. While they found no changes in learning ability or brain structure, exposed rats showed decreased movement, increased grooming behaviors, and higher stress hormone levels. These behavioral changes suggest that mobile phone radiation may disrupt normal brain function even when obvious structural damage isn't visible.
Budak GG, Muluk NB, Budak B, Oztürk GG, Apan A, Seyhan N. · 2009
Researchers exposed infant rabbits to cell phone radiation (1800 MHz) both before birth (in the womb) and after birth, then measured their hearing function using specialized tests. They found that exposure after birth decreased hearing sensitivity at certain frequencies, while exposure before birth appeared to have a protective effect. The study suggests that developing ears may be particularly vulnerable to radiofrequency radiation from mobile phones.
Abramson MJ et al. · 2009
Australian researchers tested cognitive function in 317 seventh-grade students and found that those who made more mobile phone calls performed differently on thinking tasks. Students with higher phone use showed faster but less accurate responses on complex cognitive tests, along with poorer working memory. However, since texting showed similar patterns, the researchers concluded these changes likely resulted from behavioral adaptations to frequent phone use rather than radiofrequency radiation exposure.
Narayanan SN, Kumar RS, Potu BK, Nayak S, Mailankot M · 2009
Researchers exposed rats to mobile phone signals (50 missed calls daily for 4 weeks) and then tested their ability to navigate a water maze to find a hidden platform. Phone-exposed rats took 3 times longer to find the target area and spent half as much time in the correct location compared to unexposed rats. This suggests mobile phone radiation may impair spatial memory and learning ability.
Luria R, Eliyahu I, Hareuveny R, Margaliot M, Meiran N. · 2009
Researchers had 48 men perform memory tasks while exposed to cell phone radiation on different sides of their heads. Left-side phone exposure significantly slowed right-hand reaction times during early testing, demonstrating that cell phone radiation can measurably affect brain function and cognitive performance.
Wiholm C et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed participants to mobile phone radiation at 1.4 W/kg (similar to real phone use) for 2.5 hours while they performed spatial memory tasks on a computer. Surprisingly, people who reported symptoms from phone use actually performed better during radiation exposure, while those without symptoms showed no change. This unexpected finding challenges assumptions about how phone radiation affects brain function.
Li X et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed rats to microwave radiation at various power levels and found abnormal changes in a brain protein that regulates water balance in the hippocampus, the brain's memory center. Higher exposures caused persistent protein increases that didn't recover, suggesting potential blood-brain barrier damage.
Bas O, Odaci E, Kaplan S, Acer N, Ucok K, Colakoglu S. · 2009
Researchers exposed young female rats to cell phone radiation (900 MHz) for one hour daily over 28 days and found significant loss of brain cells in the hippocampus, a region critical for memory and learning. The radiation levels used (0.016-2 W/kg SAR) overlap with what people experience during cell phone use. This cellular damage was visible both through precise cell counting and direct microscopic observation.
Wiholm C et al. · 2009
Researchers exposed volunteers to cell phone radiation for 2.5 hours while they performed spatial memory tasks (navigating a virtual maze). Surprisingly, people who already experienced symptoms from phone use actually performed better on the memory tasks during radiation exposure, while those without symptoms showed no change. This unexpected finding suggests that radiation may affect the brain differently depending on whether someone is already sensitive to electromagnetic fields.
López-Martín E et al. · 2009
Spanish researchers exposed rats to cell phone signals for 2 hours and found that pulsed GSM radiation affected brain activity differently than continuous radiation of equal strength. The pulsed signals altered gene activity in brain areas controlling seizures, emotions, and memory, suggesting unique biological effects beyond heating.
Del Vecchio G et al. · 2009
Italian researchers exposed developing brain cells to cell phone radiation at the same power level your phone uses during calls (1 W/kg SAR). The radiation significantly reduced the number of neural branches that normally grow as brain cells mature, suggesting cell phone signals may interfere with normal brain development. This finding raises concerns about wireless exposure during critical periods of brain development in children and adolescents.
Daniels WM, Pitout IL, Afullo TJ, Mabandla MV · 2009
Young rats exposed to cell phone radiation (840 MHz) for three hours daily showed subtle behavioral changes including reduced activity and increased grooming, despite normal memory and brain structure. This suggests early EMF exposure may affect brain function in ways not immediately apparent.
Bas O, Odaci E, Kaplan S, Acer N, Ucok K, Colakoglu S · 2009
Researchers exposed female rats to cell phone radiation (900 MHz) for one hour daily over 28 days. They found significant loss of brain cells in the hippocampus, the brain region responsible for memory and learning, raising concerns about potential effects from regular phone use.
Ammari M et al. · 2008
Researchers exposed male rats to a static magnetic field (128 mT) for one hour daily over five days and tested their behavior and learning abilities. The exposed rats showed reduced exploratory behavior and impaired learning and memory performance in maze tests. This suggests that even moderate static magnetic field exposure can affect brain function and cognitive abilities.