Literature DB >> 12653187

Geomagnetics and society interact in weekly and broader multiseptans underlying health and environmental integrity.

Germaine Cornélissen1, Dewayne Hillman, George S Katinas, Semen Rapoport, Tamara K Breus, Kuniaki Otsuka, Earl E Bakken, Franz Halberg.   

Abstract

Evidence for the ubiquity and partial endogenicity of about-weekly (circaseptan) components and multiples and/or submultiples thereof (the multiseptans) accumulates as longer and denser records become available. Often attributed to a mere response to the social schedule, circaseptan components now have been documented to characterize environmental variables related to primarily non-photic solar effects. Plausibly, like circadians, circaseptans are anchored in genomes, from bacteria to humans, via both an internal and external evolution. If so, circaseptans, like circadians, may be found in the absence of a 7-day schedule, whereas the social schedule may play a synchronizing role and be responsible for the detection of prominent weekly variations in population statistics. The wobbliness of multiseptans and other components of some environmental time structures (chronomes) may correspond to the wobbliness of multiseptans found in cardiovascular morbidity statistics. Here, the latter stem primarily, but not exclusively, from an extensive database on the incidence of daily calls for an ambulance in Moscow, Russia from 1979-1981. A modulation of multiseptans and other chronome components of both environmental and biological variables by the about 11-year solar activity cycle (and of other low-frequency signals reviewed elsewhere) may account for prior controversies and scepticism about a variety of non-photic effects on biota. This is notably the case when relatively short series are analyzed without consideration of effects of unassessed long-term variations; this is the task of the new field of chronomics. In the spectral element of the chronomes of geophysical and biospherical variability, there are natural near weeks,apart from any precise 7-day periodicity.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12653187     DOI: 10.1016/s0753-3322(02)00310-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomed Pharmacother        ISSN: 0753-3322            Impact factor:   6.529


  6 in total

1.  Near-transyear in solar magnetism.

Authors:  G Cornélissen; K Otsuka; F Halberg
Journal:  Biomed Pharmacother       Date:  2005-10       Impact factor: 6.529

2.  Yearly and perhaps transyearly human natality patterns near the equator and at higher latitudes.

Authors:  G Cornélissen; F Halberg; M Mikulecky; P Florida; P Faraone; T Yamanaka; S Murakami; K Otsuka; E E Bakken
Journal:  Biomed Pharmacother       Date:  2005-10       Impact factor: 6.529

3.  Prokaryotic and eukaryotic unicellular chronomics.

Authors:  F Halberg; G Cornélissen; P Faraone; B Poeggeler; R Hardeland; G Katinas; O Schwartzkopff; K Otsuka; E E Bakken
Journal:  Biomed Pharmacother       Date:  2005-10       Impact factor: 6.529

4.  CIRCAMULTISEPTAN ASPECT OF SUDDEN DEATH: COMPETING SOCIO-ECOLOGICAL SYNCHRONIZERS: ALCOHOL AND MAGNETICS?

Authors:  S Murakami; G Cornélissen; G Katinas; G Mitsutake; K Otsuka; T Breus; M Gigolashvili; B Fišer; J Pazdírek; H Svaèinová; J Siegelova; F Halberg
Journal:  Scr Med (Brno)       Date:  2005-04-01

5.  FURTHER MAPPING OF THE NATALITY CHRONOME IN TODA CITY (JAPAN) MATERNITY HOSPITAL.

Authors:  T Yamanaka; G Cornélissen; M Kazuma; N Kazuma; S Murakami; K Otsuka; J Siegelová; J Dušek; M Sosíková; F Halberg
Journal:  Scr Med (Brno)       Date:  2005

6.  Chronomics, human time estimation, and aging.

Authors:  Franz Halberg; Robert B Sothern; Germaine Cornélissen; Jerzy Czaplicki
Journal:  Clin Interv Aging       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 4.458

  6 in total

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