>>12290290Regarding EHS. Three things:
1) Some papers have shown an ability to detect well above chance
2) Sampling bias is difficult to control for. ie, just becase nocebo exists for some, doesn't mean EHS exists for none
3) Many papers have shown reliable objectively measureable physiological responses in both humans and animal models. Which is quite impressive considering there are almost literally no controls or naive subjects with which to get a strong shift from baseline.
In my case I can definitely tell. In one case it was with a rental car, started having cold clammy skin and a speedy aggressive feeling (as well as a strange sense of body position in space). Checked out the car further, which I'd previously pulled a bunch of fuses to disable some shit, and found the onstar module probably had a 4G LTE capability. Pulled that fuse too, it stopped happening. DECT phones are the clearest, they really scramble the mind and getting too close to them, or putting them up to my head, causes a sort of quasi-seizure. In one instance it triggered involuntary spasming of the arm (testing without battery and witha rock of similar size did not cause this), and I was in a store the other day with a DECT phone on the counter. By the time I got done paying I was trying to listen to what the woman behind the counter was saying and I just could not seem to understand or generate a response. I did eventually respond (coherently), and I was trying to put the stuff in the bag and it was as though I didn't have depth perception, just couldn't seem to get my hand to go in the bag. Was disoriented for the next several hours. It's either the DECT, or the RFID magnetic induction system of the payment thing. Very obnoxious, regardless. One of many such instances you begin to correlate.