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A Study Claiming WiFi Is Linked To Autism Has Been Accused Of Pseudoscience

AGXStarseed

Well-Known Member
(Not written by me)

The article in the journal Child Development, which was reported on by national media, could "cause serious harm," according to a peer-reviewed paper.


A paper in a respected psychology journal which claimed that WiFi causes "neurological and cognitive effects" similar to autism, which was picked up by national media, has been accused of pseudoscience, cherry-picking articles, and misrepresenting research.

The journal Child Development published what was described as a "review article" –an assessment of existing literature – by Cindy Sage and Ernesto Burgio. It was titled "Electromagnetic Fields, Pulsed Radiofrequency Radiation, and Epigenetics: How Wireless Technologies May Affect Childhood Development". It was published in a "special section" of Child Development addressing technology risks.

The paper got picked up by the UK national media. An article in the Express, published in May, asked: "Could wireless technology be causing MAJOR health problems in your children?"

It says "Wireless mobile phones, laptops and tablets could be causing major health problems in children and contributing to autism and hyperactivity, a new study warns," and says that these devices, "which even include baby monitors, emit radiation and electromagnetic fields that pierce thin skulls, harming memory, learning and other mental skills".

However, a new paper published in the journal PeerJ, by Dorothy Bishop, a professor of developmental psychology at the University of Oxford who specialises in developmental conditions such as autism, and David Robert Grimes, a medical physicist also at the University of Oxford, issues severe doubts about the study. They say its claims are "devoid of merit" and "should [not be] given a veneer of legitimacy".

The Child Development paper claims that phones, WiFi and other sources of electromagnetic fields (EMFs) "are widely documented to cause potentially harmful health impacts that can be detrimental to young people."

In the article itself, it says: "Overall, the scientific evidence is suggesting that chronic exposure to wireless emissions can have detrimental effects on the fetus, infant, young child and adolescent in terms of neurological development, memory, learning, attention, concentration, behavior problems, and sleep quality".

Its footnotes reference 59 studies, many of which appear to link EMF to these negative outcomes.

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Daily Express / Via express.co.uk

But Bishop and Grimes say "this piece has potential to cause serious harm". They say there is no scientifically believable way that WiFi could cause these effects, because the energy in WiFi radiation is so much lower than even visible light, and say that the authors of the Child Development study "provide no potential mechanism" for the purported effects.

They also say that the evidence the Child Development piece presents is often not peer-reviewed. In particular they claim that one piece of evidence cited in the paper is a widely discredited 2012 study called the "Bio-Initiative Report", which was carried out by Cindy Sage, one of the authors of the Child Development study.

Cindy Sage took issue with this, telling BuzzFeed News that the Bio-Initiative report was "not debunked", adding that its "great strength" was that it had been carried out "independent of governments, existing bodies and industry professional societies that prop up grossly inadequate public safety standards".

She went on: "Precisely because of this, there are the usual detractors... The BioInitiative Report is an internationally acclaimed scientific and public health report on potential health risks of electromagnetic fields and radiofrequency / microwave radiation and has stood assault from industry and its supporters for more than a decade."

Bishop and Grimes also claim the paper failed to include major relevant studies, and say that neither of the authors of the study have extensive academic credentials, which "should function as a warning sign for reviewers and editors to be especially vigilant" for signs of pseudoscience.

Sage responded: "Child Development has considered our qualifications, invited us to submit, conducted peer review on our manuscript, accepted it for publication, and published it in May 2017. Our credentials were judged to be solid, the opinions of Grimes and Bishop notwithstanding."

She called into question the relevant credentials of Bishop and Grimes themselves, saying:"Bioelectromagnetic research is not a strong suit for either Bishop or Grimes, according to Google Scholar. Bishop is an experimental psychologist who is well published in the area of childhood language impairment.

"Grimes is a physicist and postdoctoral research associate who has published in various areas of science, but has not published in the field of bioelectromagnetics. He writes science opinion pieces and [is a] radio/television contributor (citing his blog)."

However, other scientists BuzzFeed News spoke to agreed that in their opinion there are many problems with the Child Development review article. Dr Andrew Przybylski, an experimental psychologist at the Oxford Internet Institute, said that the review fails to reference some very important studies, while including some that it shouldn't.

For instance, Przybylski says, it discusses a link between EMF and cancer. But the largest-ever study, a "really rigorous" piece of work following tens of thousands of Australians for 30 years, found no link, and isn't mentioned. "There was some pretty blatant stuff missing," he says.

Grimes, one of the authors of the PeerJ study, told BuzzFeed News that the Bio-Initiative Report, which the Child Development study relies upon, is "a piece of work which has been roundly criticised by the scientific community and effectively debunked" by several national and international health bodies. The BioInitiative Report was itself co-edited by Cindy Sage; six more of her citations in the footnotes are of her own work.

Dr Pete Etchells, a psychologist at Bath Spa University, told BuzzFeed News that it refers to American Academy of Paediatrics guidelines on screen time that were issued in 2012 and have since been changed. "They’re not citing up-to-date stuff," he said. "They’re citing cherrypicked stuff to promote a certain viewpoint."

The review article's findings were not supported by the bulk of mainstream science, according to the scientists we spoke to. Andy Lewis, the author of the Quackometer anti-pseudoscience blog and himself a former radiation protection officer with a PhD in nuclear physics specialising in how radiation interacts with human tissue, told BuzzFeed News: "This is a well-understood area of science with an overwhelming consensus that the exposure we have to these technologies does not present a health risk."

All of the scientists we spoke to said it was surprising that this paper was published by Child Development, which has already reclassified Sage and Burgio's paper as a "commentary", and is expected to publish another by Grimes and Bishop in coming months.

"The report is highly selective and unbalanced in its evidence and does not present the prevailing countering view in any meaningful way," said Lewis. "This is basic nonsense, there’s no science," says Etchells. "It’s an essay, basically, and not a very good one."


Source: A Study Claiming WiFi Is Linked To Autism Has Been Accused Of Pseudoscience
 
If that were true, then there would have been a huge increase in the numbers of children dignosed with autism with the advent of Wifi and the mobile phone. The numbers have increased, but only in a linear fashion and because the condition is better understood. An exponential or even a discontinuous increase, not a linear one, would be expected if radio/microwaves truly had any such effect.
 
If the study were true, I would have to ask my parents where they keep the time machine, because there's no other way they would have had WiFi and cell phones in the early 80s :p
 

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