Behavioral Effects of Microwave Radiation Absorption
John C. Monahan, John A. D'Andrea · 1985
Government researchers were studying microwave radiation's behavioral effects in 1985, decades before widespread wireless technology adoption.
Plain English Summary
This 1985 government report by John C. Monahan and John A. D'Andrea examined how microwave radiation absorption affects behavior in living organisms. The research focused on understanding the behavioral changes that occur when organisms absorb microwave energy, contributing to early knowledge about non-thermal effects of electromagnetic fields.
Why This Matters
This government-sponsored research from 1985 represents an important milestone in recognizing that microwave radiation can affect biological systems beyond simple heating effects. The fact that researchers were studying behavioral impacts suggests awareness that EMF exposure could influence brain function and nervous system activity in ways that weren't immediately obvious. What makes this particularly relevant today is that the microwave frequencies studied in the 1980s are similar to those used in modern wireless technologies. Your smartphone, Wi-Fi router, and microwave oven all operate in frequency ranges that government scientists were already investigating for behavioral effects nearly four decades ago. The reality is that this early research laid groundwork for understanding how electromagnetic fields interact with living systems in complex ways that go far beyond the simple thermal effects that current safety standards primarily address.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{behavioral_effects_of_microwave_radiation_absorption_g4949,
author = {John C. Monahan and John A. D'Andrea},
title = {Behavioral Effects of Microwave Radiation Absorption},
year = {1985},
}