ADVANCE PROGRAM NOTICE - OPEN SYMPOSIUM ON BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES
Authors not listed · 1978
Scientists were formally studying electromagnetic wave health effects decades before cell phones became widespread.
Plain English Summary
This 1978 symposium brought together researchers to discuss biological effects of electromagnetic waves, covering microwave, extremely low frequency (ELF), and radiofrequency radiation exposure. The conference addressed dosimetry methods for measuring EMF exposure and examined health effects across different frequency ranges. This represents early scientific recognition that electromagnetic fields could have biological consequences.
Why This Matters
This 1978 symposium marks a pivotal moment in EMF research history. At a time when microwave ovens were becoming household staples and radio communications were expanding rapidly, scientists were already gathering to discuss potential biological effects. The conference's broad scope - covering everything from power line frequencies (ELF) to microwave radiation - shows researchers recognized that electromagnetic effects weren't limited to just one frequency range. What's particularly significant is the inclusion of dosimetry discussions, indicating scientists understood the need for standardized exposure measurements. This early scientific attention contradicts industry claims that EMF health concerns are recent phenomena driven by unfounded fears rather than legitimate research.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{advance_program_notice_open_symposium_on_biological_effects_of_electromagnetic_w_g6190,
author = {Unknown},
title = {ADVANCE PROGRAM NOTICE - OPEN SYMPOSIUM ON BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES},
year = {1978},
}