Rybina (2003): Comparative EEG Study — Aires NEMA Outperforms 6 Competitor Protective Devices Against Mobile Phone EMF Aftereffects

This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

FREE Bored Panda childrens book with Orders $250+ Limited Time Only!

Rybina (2003): Comparative EEG Study — Aires NEMA Outperforms 6 Competitor Protective Devices Against Mobile Phone EMF Aftereffects

Pavlov Institute of Physiology · Russian Academy of Sciences 2003 Comparative EEG Report

Rybina (2003): Comparative EEG Study — Aires NEMA Outperforms 6 Competitor Devices Against Mobile Phone EMF Aftereffects

Author: L.A. Rybina, Candidate of Biological Sciences, Researcher, Pavlov Institute of Physiology, Russian Academy of Sciences
Coordinated by: E.V. Bychkov, Managing Director
Date: September 20, 2003
Method: Standard electroencephalography (EEG) — spectral-correlative analysis, 21-electrode recording
Devices compared: Aires NEMA + 6 competitor protective devices (My Shield-3, Serb-3, Neutronic-11, Vision-1, Ratan-7, Gamma-5)

Study Overview

This is a unique head-to-head comparative EEG study. Larisa Rybina of the Pavlov Institute of Physiology conducted EEG assessments of subjects using a mobile phone without protection, with the Aires NEMA (electromagnetic anomalies neutralizer), and with each of 6 competitor protective devices commercially available at the time. This study is significant because it does not merely test a single device in isolation — it explicitly compares device categories and ranks their EEG effects.

Methodology

Standard EEG was recorded using a chamber shielded from the mobile phone base station. Spectral analysis covered five frequency bands: delta (0.5–4.0 Hz), theta (4.0–8.0 Hz), alpha (8.0–13.0 Hz), beta1 and beta2 (13.0–24.0 Hz). Parameters assessed included spectral power dynamics, coherence, cross-correlation index, and the alpha activity damping decrement (front-to-back gradient).

Findings — Mobile Phone Without Protection

Three characteristic EEG changes were identified from mobile phone use:

  1. Activation-deactivation imbalance — shifted strongly toward activation
  2. Bioelectrical disorganization — loss of frequency domination (>50% absent), disrupted alpha gradient from occipital to frontal areas, local low-frequency disturbances
  3. Disrupted interhemispheric coordination — interaction between central structures disordered

Findings — Aires NEMA

Aires NEMA produced the best overall correction:
  • Moderate deactivation shift (healthier direction) — slowing of dominant rhythm, increased low-frequency component
  • Increased power of dominant alpha activity with frontal accent
  • Correction of local bioelectrical activity disorders caused by the phone

Findings — Competitor Devices

Best performers among competitors: Vision-1 (#4) and Gamma-5 (#6) were most effective — neither produced local disturbances during phone use, and the overall rhythm distribution pattern was similar to background. However, both still showed activation shifts in dominant frequency.

Poor performers: My Shield-3 (#1) and Serb-3 (#2) showed no significant correction of frequency-amplitude indices; beta range interaction disturbances persisted vs. background.

Problematic performers: Neutronic-11 (#3) and Ratan-7 (#5) actually produced measurable EEG changes even without the phone present — increased activation, delayed alpha recovery after eye-opening — suggesting these devices themselves affected brain activity patterns in a potentially adverse direction.

Significance

This 2003 comparative study is historically important as one of the first systematic EEG comparisons of EMF protective devices. The finding that some devices (#3, #5) altered brain EEG even without the phone present suggests that not all EMF protective devices have neutral effects — a methodological point that supports using standard EEG as the benchmark measurement for device evaluation. Aires NEMA was the only device that simultaneously corrected the phone-induced disturbances across all three EEG domains (power, distribution, and interhemispheric coordination).

Related Studies