Sensory Stressors
Cross-source consensus on Sensory Stressors from 1 sources and 7 claims.
1 sources · 7 claims
Uses
Risks & contraindications
Evidence quality
Where it comes from
Highlighted claims
- The article treats EMFs as meaningful but notes that it does not provide detailed exposure limits, measurement units, or intervention protocols. — Hidden Home Toxins and Healthy Indoor Environments
- Noise is described as a physiological stressor rather than merely an annoyance. — Hidden Home Toxins and Healthy Indoor Environments
- The article identifies Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, computers, laptops, cell phones, wireless technology, and 5G infrastructure as EMF sources. — Hidden Home Toxins and Healthy Indoor Environments
- Bedrooms are treated as especially important quiet zones, and site selection near major noise or exhaust sources is presented as consequential. — Hidden Home Toxins and Healthy Indoor Environments
- EMFs are ranked second after mold among the article’s indoor stressors. — Hidden Home Toxins and Healthy Indoor Environments
- LED lighting is criticized for flicker, blue-heavy spectrum, and electromagnetic effects. — Hidden Home Toxins and Healthy Indoor Environments
- Evening LED exposure is described as disruptive to sleep, while candlelight or dim wax-based LED candles are presented as gentler evening options. — Hidden Home Toxins and Healthy Indoor Environments