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Artificial EMG (electromyogram) by WLAN exposure

PAPER manual 2021 Unknown Effect: harm Evidence: Insufficient

Abstract

Artificial EMG (electromyogram) by WLAN exposure Lebrecht von Klitzing. Artificial EMG (electromyogram) by WLAN exposure. Journal of Biostatistics and Biometric Applications. 6(1): 2021. Abstract WLAN (wireless local area network) is used as an important worldwide communication-technique. By this, always there is an electromagnetic field exposure. In contrast to the ICNIRP-safety guidelines, whereby no bioeffect is possible by these low-energetic electromagnetic fields, we found artificial signals in the nervous system in dependence on WLAN- exposure, Open access paper: annexpublishers.com

AI evidence extraction

At a glance
Study type
Unknown
Effect direction
harm
Population
β€”
Sample size
β€”
Exposure
RF wi-fi
Evidence strength
Insufficient
Confidence: 55% Β· Peer-reviewed: unknown

Main findings

The abstract reports that artificial signals in the nervous system (described as artificial EMG) were found in dependence on WLAN exposure, and contrasts this with ICNIRP safety guidelines.

Outcomes measured

  • artificial EMG signals
  • nervous system signals

Limitations

  • No methods, population details, exposure parameters (e.g., frequency, power/SAR), or sample size are provided in the abstract.
  • Outcome measurement details and statistical results are not described.

Suggested hubs

  • school-wi-fi (0.6)
    Focuses on WLAN/Wi-Fi exposure.
  • who-icnirp (0.5)
    Explicitly discusses ICNIRP safety guidelines.
View raw extracted JSON
{
    "study_type": "unknown",
    "exposure": {
        "band": "RF",
        "source": "wi-fi",
        "frequency_mhz": null,
        "sar_wkg": null,
        "duration": null
    },
    "population": null,
    "sample_size": null,
    "outcomes": [
        "artificial EMG signals",
        "nervous system signals"
    ],
    "main_findings": "The abstract reports that artificial signals in the nervous system (described as artificial EMG) were found in dependence on WLAN exposure, and contrasts this with ICNIRP safety guidelines.",
    "effect_direction": "harm",
    "limitations": [
        "No methods, population details, exposure parameters (e.g., frequency, power/SAR), or sample size are provided in the abstract.",
        "Outcome measurement details and statistical results are not described."
    ],
    "evidence_strength": "insufficient",
    "confidence": 0.5500000000000000444089209850062616169452667236328125,
    "peer_reviewed_likely": "unknown",
    "keywords": [
        "WLAN",
        "Wi-Fi",
        "RF exposure",
        "electromyogram",
        "EMG",
        "nervous system",
        "ICNIRP"
    ],
    "suggested_hubs": [
        {
            "slug": "school-wi-fi",
            "weight": 0.59999999999999997779553950749686919152736663818359375,
            "reason": "Focuses on WLAN/Wi-Fi exposure."
        },
        {
            "slug": "who-icnirp",
            "weight": 0.5,
            "reason": "Explicitly discusses ICNIRP safety guidelines."
        }
    ]
}

AI can be wrong. Always verify against the paper.

AI-extracted fields are generated from the abstract/metadata and may be incomplete or incorrect. This content is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice.

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