EEG after radar-application
L. Sinisi · 1954
1954 radar research pioneered investigation of microwave radiation's effects on human brain electrical activity.
Plain English Summary
This 1954 conference paper by Sinisi examined brain electrical activity (EEG) in humans after radar exposure. The research represents one of the earliest documented investigations into how microwave radiation from radar systems affects human brain function. This pioneering study laid groundwork for understanding neurological impacts of electromagnetic field exposure.
Why This Matters
This 1954 research represents a remarkable early recognition that radar systems might affect human brain function. The science demonstrates that concerns about microwave radiation's neurological effects aren't new - they date back to the dawn of radar technology itself. What makes this historically significant is the timing: just over a decade after radar's widespread military deployment, researchers were already investigating potential brain impacts.
The reality is that radar operators in the 1940s and 1950s were exposed to far higher microwave radiation levels than we typically encounter today from consumer devices. Yet this early research established a scientific foundation for understanding how electromagnetic fields interact with neural tissue - knowledge that remains relevant as we evaluate modern wireless technologies operating in similar frequency ranges.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{eeg_after_radar_application_g6978,
author = {L. Sinisi},
title = {EEG after radar-application},
year = {1954},
}