Environmental transition windows may increase susceptibility to respiratory illness symptoms due to transient phase desynchronization in physiological processes.
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Version 2 reflects clarifications and structural refinements made in response to peer review.It improves conceptual clarity relative to v1; further refinements may follow. Abstract This paper proposes a phase-synchronization hypothesis of the common cold and seasonal respiratory illness, offering a complementary perspective to pathogen-centered models of infection. Viral exposure and replication are necessary conditions for respiratory disease; the present hypothesis instead focuses on why such exposure preferentially progresses to symptomatic illness during periods of rapid environmental transition. Physiological processes including thermoregulation, autonomic rhythms, and immune-cell trafficking operate as coupled oscillatory systems that are continuously entrained to environmental cues. During periods of rapid environmental change—such as abrupt shifts in temperature, humidity, or barometric pressure—the rate of external variation may exceed the body’s capacity for coordinated physiological adjustment. These periods, termed environmental transition windows, are hypothesized to increase susceptibility to transient phase desynchronization, thereby modulating the timing and severity of symptom expression. To organize this framework, three conceptual--operational constructs are introduced: the Phase Filtering Index (alignment between physiological and environmental oscillatory dynamics), the Thermal Coherence Loop (thermoregulatory responses during illness), and the Phase Transition Load (the cumulative burden imposed by rapid environmental gradients). These constructs are intended to define measurable variable spaces and guide future empirical modeling, rather than to function as finalized quantitative indices. Epidemiological observations suggest that population-level peaks in respiratory illness often coincide with periods of rapid environmental transition rather than absolute climatic states, motivating a coherence-based interpretation of seasonal disease dynamics. The hypothesis generates testable predictions involving microclimate stabilization, physiological buffering capacity, and susceptibility thresholds detectable through wearable physiological measurements. Overall, this framework aims to clarify how environmental dynamics interact with host physiology to shape the timing and expression of respiratory illness, without challenging the central role of viral pathogens or established infection-control principles.
Doha Lee (Thu,) reported a other. Environmental transition windows may increase susceptibility to respiratory illness symptoms due to transient phase desynchronization in physiological processes.
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