Researchers Probe Cell-Phone Effects.Cell phones are hot. Some 85 million U.S. residents--30 percent of the population--have joined the mobile-phone revolution. Still, Americans have been relatively slow to go wireless. Even a decade ago, when U.S. cellphone (CELLular telePHONE) The first ubiquitous wireless telephone. Originally analog, all new cellular systems are digital, which has enabled the cellphone to turn into a smartphone that has access to the Internet. use was a rarity, 10 percent of Swedes This is a list of well known Swedes, ordered alphabetically within categories: Actors Main article: List of Swedish actors
Many of these people are also reporting side effects Side effects Effects of a proposed project on other parts of the firm. , observes Monica Sandstrom of the Swedish National Institute for Working Life in Umea. Last week at a Bioelectromagnetics Society symposium in Washington, D.C., she unveiled data from her agency's new survey of cellphone users--5,000 in Norway and another 12,000 in Sweden. One-quarter of the Norwegian users, she noted, feel warmth on or behind the ear when they use their phones. More troubling, she said, 20 percent also linked frequent headaches and recurring fatigue to cell-phone use. Her agency saw the same trends in Sweden, though the overall rates were somewhat lower, Sandstrom notes. At least one of the symptoms noted, which include dizziness, concentration difficulties, memory loss, and a burning sensation, showed up in 47 percent of people who reported using these wireless devices an hour or more daily. Cellular phones, which send and receive radiofrequency (RF) signals via their attached antennas, come in digital and analog varieties. The newer, digital phones broadcast their communications in discrete bursts of energy, whereas analog devices Analog Devices (NYSE: ADI) is an American multinational producer of semiconductor devices. Analog specializes in ADC, DAC, MEMS, and DSP chips for consumer and industrial goods. Analog is presently designing circuits in the 65 nanometer to 3 µm process feature sizes range. employ continuous signals. Being energy hogs, analog phones also beam eight times as much energy into the user's head as digital phones do. Overall, "people using analog phones reported more symptoms and more sensations of all kinds," Sandstrom says. However, she's quick to add, "we didn't measure RF emissions." Any headaches or other complaints might therefore trace to factors such as occupational stress, ergonomic ergonomic - Concerning ergonomics or exhibitting good ergonimics. issues, and even the warmth given off by a phone's battery. Yet cell phones' RF emissions clearly can affect the brain, says Alan W. Preece of the University of Bristol in England. Last April, he published a study in which devices simulated a phone's RF emissions, in either digital or analog form, while volunteers, sat at a computer. The researchers could switch the RF energy on or off without a user knowing. "I was looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. memory effects but didn't find any," Preece notes. Instead, to his surprise, RF emissions from both digital and analog signals correlated with a cut in the time it took users to answer simple questions. The improvement was small, just 15 milliseconds. Since then, he notes, a Finnish group recorded a similar drop in reaction time among people during RF exposures. And a few weeks ago, a statistical expert "acting on behalf of the Department of Health here [in Britain] reanalyzed my data," Preece told SCIENCE NEWS. "He came up with the same results." While hardly a hazard, the quickened reaction times demonstrate that cellphone emissions are biologically active, Preece says. He's now probing what's going on What's Going On is a record by American soul singer Marvin Gaye. Released on May 21, 1971 (see 1971 in music), What's Going On reflected the beginning of a new trend in soul music. , scouting for changes in blood flow within the brain. He's especially interested in the angular gyrus angular gyrus n. A convolution in the inferior parietal lobe formed by the united posterior ends of the superior and middle temporal gyri and involved in the processing of auditory and visual input and in the comprehension of language. , a structure important to decision making. Other scientists last week reported biological effects in animals triggered by bombardment with energy at power levels and frequencies typical of cell phones. W. Ross Adey of the University of California, Riverside The University of California, Riverside, commonly known as UCR or UC Riverside, is a public research university and one of ten campuses of the University of California system. , for instance, showed that a pregnant rat's exposure to phone-like radiation at any of three power levels alters the activity of an enzyme--ornithine decarboxylase--in the fetuses' brains. This enzyme helps create polyamines, which are chemical markers of stress. Surprisingly, Adey noted, the lowest input of RF energy, 0.16 watts per kilogram kilogram, abbr. kg, fundamental unit of mass in the metric system, defined as the mass of the International Prototype Kilogram, a platinum-iridium cylinder kept at Sèvres, France, near Paris. of tissue, triggered the biggest changes in polyamine polyamine /poly·am·ine/ (-am´en) any compound, e.g., spermine or spermidine, containing two or more amino groups. pol·y·a·mine n. concentration. He speculates that increased enzyme activity Enzyme activity A measure of the ability of an enzyme to catalyze a specific reaction. Mentioned in: Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency , which can foster certain cancers, "may offer an explanation" of tumors that he and his colleagues have observed in rats exposed to RF energy for long periods. While concern over possible cancer risks has dominated public debate of cell-phone safety, until now there have been too few long-term users of the technology to make epidemiological studies practical, notes Feychting. She adds that by pooling data from many countries, however, detecting risks for several types of cancers should now be possible. This summer, a 13-country study of brain and other head-and-neck cancers in cellphone users will begin under the aegis of the International Agency for Research on Cancer The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC, or CIRC in its French acronym) is an intergovernmental agency forming part of the World Health Organisation of the United Nations. Its main offices are in Lyon, France. in Lyon, France. Allen H. Frey, a Washington, D.C.-area consultant who has conducted cellphone studies, hopes neurological effects won't be ignored in a rush to study cancer. Headaches, nausea, and reports of warming "could be merely the most obvious symptoms that something else is going on," he says. "There are some real indications of a hazard here." |
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