Temperature and Temperament: Evidence from a Billion Tweets [pdf](ei.haas.berkeley.edu)
ei.haas.berkeley.edu
Temperature and Temperament: Evidence from a Billion Tweets [pdf]
http://ei.haas.berkeley.edu/research/papers/WP265.pdf
8 comments
Having lived in both Michigan and Texas, humidity is the largest factor in high-temperature enjoyment. In high-humidity, anything over 75F is difficult. But in Texas where the humidity is lower I can easily enjoy >85F.
Indeed. Running in Colorado sunlight at 90F is not bad. Running in Maryland shade at 90F is uncomfortable and could be dangerous.
That tweet density map on page 42. https://xkcd.com/1138/
Did the author just conclude that most people don't enjoy summer (defined as above 70F/21C, not some extreme 95F/35C craziness).
(Common sense, anyone?)
(Common sense, anyone?)
Link didn't work
"For example, in winter, we are cautious about deploying our immune resources. That’s why a cold lasts much longer in winter than it does in summer. It’s not because we’re cold, it’s because our bodies, based on deep evolutionary history reckon that it’s not so safe to use our immune resources in winter, as it would be in summer. There’s experimental confirmation of this in animals. Suppose a hamster is injected with bacteria which makes it sick - but in one case the hamster is on an artificial day/night cycle that suggests it’s summer; in the other case it’s on a cycle that suggests it’s winter. If the hamster is tricked into thinking it’s summer, it throws everything it has got against the infection and recovers completely. If it thinks it’s winter then it just mounts a holding operation, as if it’s waiting until it knows it’s safe to mount a full-scale response" from: http://www.gwern.net/Drug%20heuristics
edit:typos