Guest guest Posted September 30, 2004 Report Share Posted September 30, 2004 This is a response to an email about an earlier post. KC What I'm trying to do is to get a better handle on what it is people tend to experience with regard to different air flow patterns. There don't seem to be any " good " descriptive measures of subjective feelings in this area. Yes, please, if there is information on this topic I'd like to know. Sure, there are plenty of reports about actual symptoms (dry throat, running eyes, hacking cough, etc.), but are there any effects that preceed these physical symptoms? I suppose I'm trying to find if there are pre- onset characteristics that people might be able to report about and which are as a gieger counter. As a place to begin from then I was thinking of assembling a set of simple, everday adjectives. Does this make sense? Then, when I came across the discussion group it struck me that here's a cluster of people who would know exactly what I'm on about, have first hand experience and may be able to help out. I'll look forward to your comments and suggestions. In particular I would welcome being assisted to any related literature or links about subjective (rather than physical) experiences. With thanks, K > I'm trying to make up a list of common words to describe the > sensations arising from different air flow effects, both adequate and > inadequate. For starters, there are words/adjectives like: > > stuffy, close, humid, cold, warm, stale, fresh, clammy, > > and so on > > Feel free to contribute - the more the better. > Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 30, 2004 Report Share Posted September 30, 2004 This is a response to an email about an earlier post. KC What I'm trying to do is to get a better handle on what it is people tend to experience with regard to different air flow patterns. There don't seem to be any " good " descriptive measures of subjective feelings in this area. Yes, please, if there is information on this topic I'd like to know. Sure, there are plenty of reports about actual symptoms (dry throat, running eyes, hacking cough, etc.), but are there any effects that preceed these physical symptoms? I suppose I'm trying to find if there are pre- onset characteristics that people might be able to report about and which are as a gieger counter. As a place to begin from then I was thinking of assembling a set of simple, everday adjectives. Does this make sense? Then, when I came across the discussion group it struck me that here's a cluster of people who would know exactly what I'm on about, have first hand experience and may be able to help out. I'll look forward to your comments and suggestions. In particular I would welcome being assisted to any related literature or links about subjective (rather than physical) experiences. With thanks, K > I'm trying to make up a list of common words to describe the > sensations arising from different air flow effects, both adequate and > inadequate. For starters, there are words/adjectives like: > > stuffy, close, humid, cold, warm, stale, fresh, clammy, > > and so on > > Feel free to contribute - the more the better. > Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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