Talk:Cabin fever
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Cabin Fever was an incident of sudden berserk violence when two trappers, mountain men, attempted to over-winter in small cabins in the 1830's. Beaver and other pelts were at their best when in full winter thickness. They ran trap lines over the countryside during the winter. Accounts of Cabin Fever were in books about figures such as Jim Bridger. It happened when the men were snowed in and were confined in the small room for weeks.
There are stories of an Axe murder in Russian polar station during an argument over a chess game. When fistfights began to happen in Russian space missions, again over chess games, Russia banned chess in space. The same conditions are present in polar stations, space capsules, and those small 1830's trapper's cabins. The same exposure to Subliminal Distraction happens anytime two or more people attempt to live and work in too-small single-room situations.
Those berserk episodes of violence still happen today in locations where families live in traditional or ethnic housing. These are usually single-room mud huts- Africa, Hogans- Navajo, Yurts and other tents in Lapp nomadic groups (Lapp Panic is a S-M behavior). In Malaysia the sudden violence is called Amok, among the Navajo it is called iich'aa and here in the united states it is called Going Postal. All these bizarre events are Culture Bound Syndromes, some from the DSM.
The best way to understand this effect is to study the jumping diseases. Jumping Frenchmen of Maine was discovered when French Canadian lumberjacks began demonstrating strange startle-matching behaviors. The same behavior was found in Malaysia where is is called, Latah. Then other cases were found around the world. In all these locations where the subjects have vastly different beliefs, customs, and different levels of technological advancement, victims live in single-room housing. In 1880's Maine lumberjacks lived in bunkhouses. In Malaysia entire villages lived in longhouses. In his book "Boo!," Dr Simmons, recounts single cases of startle-matching behavior in workers on factory floors in the US. All those locations allow exposure to Subliminal Distraction.
The reason to study startle-matching to illustrate sudden violence, is that the S-M behaviors are so strange they cannot be mistaken and no argument can be made that it might be something else or one or more cases do not meet the standard for inclusion.
Why does one level of exposure produce violence and another startle-matching? I don't know except that the extreme hyper-suggestibility of the S-M cases indicates that operant conditioning is involved. When one is involved in a dispute the operant conditioning raises the dispute to a psychotic-like level so that when the mental break associated with Subliminal Distraction in business offices happens, violence is the outcome. It would follow that college suicides happen when the operant conditioning works with the worries of college failure or other issues.
Visual Subliminal Distraction is not recognized in the United States and has been ridiculed by moderators for Wikipedia. Here SD only refers to the physiology of sensor cells that do not stop sending neural impulses to your brain when stimulated even though you dissociate slightly, ignoring everything happening around you. You do that when you read, write, use a computer, become lost in thought or daydream. When the stimulation is movement in far peripheral vision it is detected as threat-movement to trigger a startle and vision reflex. Subliminal efforts your brain makes to force the startle are also a Subliminal Distraction.
In the 1960's that phenomenon caused mental breaks for knowledge workers using the first prototypes of movable close-spaced office workstations. The Cubicle solved that problem.
http://VisionAndPsychosis.Net index and page list. http://visionandpsychosis.net/Culture_Bound_Syndromes.htm http://visionandpsychosis.net/Astronauts_Insanity.htm
L K Tucker 68.211.73.143 03:07, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
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- any point of putting this on the talk page instead of the main page?
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- Well, if you can find piles of sources to back up all that stuff, aside from the unscholarly links given above, go for it. If not, let's just keep it on the talk page until someone can... Afrank 06:21, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
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[edit] NO
As fast as you can edit this into the article someone will come along and eliminate it. Information on the mental events that cause this problem are not in text books. A grad student who emailed me said that the information is only in lecture material. She said students are expected to "pick it up" during their course study in design. The business office problem does appear on TV shows as a novelty item. The last person I spoke with about that said it had been on a medical show aired over dish network in the last three years.
If you can name any one of the several shows that have featured this visit the site link above and email me.
L K Tucker 68.217.113.57 21:07, 16 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Frank
Although there is tons about where this condition come from, there is virtually no information about this condition and so this artical is not very informative. Can you provide me more information.
Also, I would like to consider the effects of cabit fever in family life.
[edit] Effects of Subliminal Distraction on Family Life
I have been unable to carry out the next phase of my research project which is field interviews of subjects. That's probably what you wanted to know.
I can point to two cases where enough information was published in news accounts or TV video to establish Subliminal Distraction played a part in the episode. The Janet Marchcase and the Beverly Watson case resulted in deaths and convictions of the husbands.
The one local subject I found did not want to give an interview. He said he and his wife began to fight over nothing until they moved their business office. The disputes disappeared when that change was made.
Mark Bartonbelieved he was having a mental break. His suicide note mentioned unattributed fear so intense he said he could not bear it. That's one of the outcomes of SD exposure. He killed his wife and two children with a hammer before shooting up two investment companies in Atlanta. He placed his computer in the apartment living room where his family could walk around him as he used it.
I suggest you start with the recent Virginia Tech shooting. Cho created the "special circumstances" for exposure when he used the suite common room to study and use his laptop.
The effect on family life might be anything from children constantly fighting to a serious event with violence. You may use any information on my site to work on your project. I am the site owner and copyright holder.
L K Tucker 74.224.31.241 05:55, 11 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] What are BTM's
Under the section other meanings it says It was derived from "Drink or Sink", an event created to bring together friends and celebrate the birthday of BTM's. Yet nowhere in the article does it define what BTM means. If someone knows what it is they should clarify that. Itsmeiam (talk) 06:52, 20 November 2007 (UTC)
[edit] I rewrote the article
Didn't do much, just kind of reorganized things, made it less of a mess, added some info from when the Mythbusters tested it. Some of the old references were either broken links or simply didn't add anything to the article. I also emphasized The Shining as a classic literary example, which may or may not be a good thing...I haven't read the book. There's probably other good examples, but I highly doubt Muppet Treasure Island is one. Feel free to add or expand. --UsaSatsui (talk) 04:48, 25 April 2008 (UTC)
- For those people who are reverting some of my additions because the source is Mythbusters, I'd like to point out the show does meet the criteria in WP:RS as a "reliable, third-party published source with a reputation for fact-checking and accuracy." --UsaSatsui (talk) 10:49, 23 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Seasonal affective disorder
Someone has added this link to this article with no explanation. I can see no relationship between these topics and am removing it. --Hordaland (talk) 07:31, 30 May 2008 (UTC)