Study Overview
This pilot study examines the special aspects of cerebral bioelectrical activity changes upon exposure to mobile phone electromagnetic fields (EMF), and specifically investigates the influence of the Aires Shield Neutralizer on those changes. As a pilot study, it represents the initial systematic EEG observations that established the research protocol later used in the larger independent studies by L. Rybina (2020) and M. Sysoev.
Pilot studies are essential components of a research program: they establish whether an effect is measurable and worth pursuing at larger scale, validate the measurement protocol, and identify which EEG parameters are most sensitive to EMF exposure. This study fulfilled that function for the Aires EEG research cluster.
What This Study Examined
The study focused on two specific questions:
- Detection — Are changes in cerebral bioelectrical activity measurably associated with mobile phone EMF exposure?
- Intervention — Does the presence of the Aires Shield Neutralizer modify those EEG changes?
The term “special aspects” in the study title refers to the specific EEG characteristics that change under EMF conditions — not simply whether total brain activity changes, but which frequency components change, in what direction, and to what magnitude.
Key Findings
Role in the EEG Research Program
This pilot study occupies a specific position in the EEG cluster: it is the foundational study that preceded and motivated the larger independent studies. The research sequence is:
- Pilot study (this document) — initial detection and protocol establishment
- Rybina EEG Study (2020) — independent full-scale study
- Sysoev EEG Study — parallel independent full-scale study
- Sysoev & Rybina Joint Study (2025) — synthesis and extension
Together these four studies constitute the EEG cluster of the Aires research archive: a complete research sequence from pilot detection through independent replication and joint synthesis.
Device Note
This study uses the product name Aires Shield Neutralizer, which is an earlier commercial designation for the Aires resonator technology. The underlying technology — the fractal diffraction grating silicon microprocessor matrix (Patent No. 2312384) — is the same across all product generations. Subsequent studies use the designation Aires resonator or refer to specific current product models.