“…Subsequent studies indicated that exposure to low-frequency magnetic fields is able to alter basic neural function in rats (Lovely et al, 1993;Lyskov et al, 1996;Thomas et al, 1986;Welker et al, 1983;Zhadin et al, 1999), effects that have in part been explained in terms of changes in the glutamate receptor N-methyl-D-aspartate (Flohr, 2000;Frilot et al, 2014). A variety of other reports (Cvetkovic and Cosic, 2009;Vorobyov et al, 1997Vorobyov et al, , 1998Vorobyov et al, , 2010 have linked weak ELF magnetic field exposure to changes in the EEG, to electrical activity in the brain (Marino et al, 2004) and to neuroendocrine receptors (Janac et al, 2009). One critically important addition to this body of research (Zhadin et al, 1998) established that the conductivity of glutamic acid in solution increases sharply at remarkably small magnetic field levels (~40 nT) when these fields are applied at ion cyclotron resonance field combinations, a result independently replicated in three other laboratories (Alberto et al, 2008;Comisso et al, 2006;Pazur, 2004).…”