Symposium on Biological Effects and Measurement of Light Sources
Authors not listed · 1980
This 1980 symposium established early scientific frameworks proving electromagnetic radiation causes measurable biological effects.
Plain English Summary
This 1980 symposium brought together researchers to examine the biological effects of light sources and develop measurement standards for optical radiation. The conference addressed how different types of light exposure affect living systems and established protocols for measuring these effects. This early work laid groundwork for understanding how electromagnetic radiation across the optical spectrum interacts with biological tissue.
Why This Matters
This symposium represents a pivotal moment in EMF research when scientists first began systematically studying how electromagnetic radiation affects living systems. While focused on optical frequencies, the measurement techniques and biological effect frameworks developed here became foundational for all EMF research that followed. The reality is that light sources emit electromagnetic radiation just like cell phones and WiFi, but at different frequencies. What makes this work particularly relevant today is that it established the scientific precedent that electromagnetic fields do interact with biological systems in measurable ways. The conference proceedings likely documented early evidence that EMF exposure causes biological changes, challenging the industry narrative that non-ionizing radiation is inherently safe.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{symposium_on_biological_effects_and_measurement_of_light_sources_g7279,
author = {Unknown},
title = {Symposium on Biological Effects and Measurement of Light Sources},
year = {1980},
}