Many of us enjoy an occasional bedtime chat with a love one who is far
away. But as more and more people trade in their landlines for mobile
phones, they may find that these late night conversations are no longer
a good idea. According to recent studies, cell phone signals can alter
brain waves-and the consequences will keep you up at night.



Neuroscientists Rodney Croft
<http://www.swin.edu.au/bioscieleceng/honours.html>  and his colleagues
at Swinburne University of Technology <http://www.swin.edu.au>  in
Australia strapped a Nokia 6110 cell phone to the heads of 120 men and
women and then monitored their brain waves. When the researchers
switched on the phone without the subjects' knowledge, they saw a
sudden power boost in the volunteers' alpha brain waves. Alpha waves
normally surge as the mind shuts out the external word and spins
internal thoughts. Croft believes the heightened alpha waves reflect the
mind concentrating to overcome the electrical interference in brain
circuits caused by the pulsed microwave radiation from cell phones.



In different study, sleep researchers at Loughborough University in
England found that after a 30-minute exposure to cell phone signals in
talk mode, people took nearly twice as long to fall asleep as they did
when the phone had been off or in standby mode. The scientists think the
effect probably reflects the time it takes the brain to relax after
being agitated by the phone's electrical field.



James Horne, one of the study's authors, cautions that the effects
are harmless and less disruptive to sleep than half a cup of coffee.
Still, he wonders, "With different doses, durations or other devices
would there be greater effects?"




Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>
Expand your genius through  Total-Mind Learning  Series coaching 
program  <http://www.primastudy.com/>   ....


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