“…In one of the most comprehensive studies, Gabriel et al (1996) reported the dielectric properties of a large number of biological tissues including freshly excised bovine and porcine tissue, human autopsy material, and human skin and tongue over a frequency range of 10 Hz-20 GHz. Dielectric data for various human and animal tissues reported in other studies (Foster et al 1979, Surowiec et al 1987, Peyman et al 2001, Schmid et al 2003, Lazebnik et al 2006, Abdilla et al 2013, Sasaki et al 2014 align with the data presented in (Gabriel et al 1996), which is widely used in electromagnetic modeling and assessment of specific absorption rate. Stuchly et al (1982) studied inter-species differences in dielectric properties of skeletal muscle, brain cortex, spleen, and liver tissue between 0.1 and 10 GHz, and reported a very small difference (within system uncertainty) between the same tissues of different species, which led researchers to believe that the data from animal studies can be generalized and used for human tissue modeling.…”