In animal studies, cellphone-type radiation was found to stimulate dopamine receptors. Kind of like opiates do.
One question not addressed is how much of the radiation does the cell phone user absorb a) when turning on the phone only to check on activity, vs. b) having the phone on all the time.
Another fun fact: in a recent tally of biological studies on cell phone frequencies since 1990 (H.Lai, 2022, bioinitiative.org) 82% showed biological effects. The most frequently replicated: oxidative stress/free radical formation, DNA damage/genetic effects, and neurological effects.
In animal studies, cellphone-type radiation was found to stimulate dopamine receptors. Kind of like opiates do.
One question not addressed is how much of the radiation does the cell phone user absorb a) when turning on the phone only to check on activity, vs. b) having the phone on all the time.
Another fun fact: in a recent tally of biological studies on cell phone frequencies since 1990 (H.Lai, 2022, bioinitiative.org) 82% showed biological effects. The most frequently replicated: oxidative stress/free radical formation, DNA damage/genetic effects, and neurological effects.