DocumentCode :
3167741
Title :
The brain effects of occupational strength 50 Hz magnetic field
Author :
Sadafi, Hassan A. ; Wood, Andrew W. ; Bailey, Michael ; Wesnes, Keith
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Biophys. Sci. & Electr. Eng., Swinburne Univ. of Technol., Hawthorn, Vic, Austria
Volume :
2
fYear :
2003
fDate :
11-16 May 2003
Firstpage :
832
Abstract :
Human cognitive behavioural and neurophysiological effects during exposure to extremely low frequency (ELF) 50 Hz magnetic field (MF) of 28.4 μT were measured triple-blinded. Forty subjects were exposed to MF and sham in two visits in counterbalanced orders. The visits were scheduled after two training sessions and one baseline session. Two of the 29 parameters assessed were inter-peak latencies of visual evoked response (VER) and auditory evoked response (AER). The other 27 variables were measures of the brain performance, reaction time (RT), learning, memory (spatial, short-term, long-term, working and secondary), storage and retrieval of information (numerical, verbal and pictorial), accuracy, errors, attention, alertness and vigilance. The conclusion was a small decline in the human brain performance and in particular statistically significant deterioration in choice reaction time accuracy (p=0.03), word recognition accuracy (p=0.03) and numerical working memory (p=0.05). This study found no effect in grouped measures of alertness. No adjustment for multiple comparisons has been made, and as such, with 29 outcome variables, the authors acknowledge that any statistically significant result at a 5% level may be due solely to chance.
Keywords :
auditory evoked potentials; biological effects of fields; biomagnetism; biomedical engineering; brain; cognition; neurophysiology; visual evoked potentials; 28.4 muT; 50 Hz; ELF magnetic field; auditory evoked response; brain alertness; brain effects; brain learning performance; brain reaction time; extremely low frequency; human brain performance; human cognitive effect; neurophysiological effect; numerical information; numerical working memory; occupational strength magnetic field; pictorial information; verbal information; visual evoked response; word recognition accuracy; Australia; Brain; Delay; Electric variables measurement; Frequency; Geophysical measurement techniques; Ground penetrating radar; Humans; Magnetic field measurement; Time measurement;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Electromagnetic Compatibility, 2003. EMC '03. 2003 IEEE International Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7779-6
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICSMC2.2003.1429036
Filename :
1429036
Link To Document :
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