Difference between revisions of "Pen and paper"
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Using '''pen and paper''' is a very basic way of tracking data but still widely used and accessible. In particular it can be useful for [[Tools for journaling, thoughts and note taking|Journaling, thoughts and note taking]] and [[Tools to survey symptoms and states|surveying symptoms and states]]. | Using '''pen and paper''' is a very basic way of tracking data but still widely used and accessible. In particular it can be useful for [[Tools for journaling, thoughts and note taking|Journaling, thoughts and note taking]] and [[Tools to survey symptoms and states|surveying symptoms and states]]. |
Revision as of 12:34, 30 June 2022
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Tool Infobox | |
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Related topics | Journaling, Symptom tracking |
Linked pages on this wiki |
Projects (18), |
Using pen and paper is a very basic way of tracking data but still widely used and accessible. In particular it can be useful for Journaling, thoughts and note taking and surveying symptoms and states.
Linked content on this wiki
(The content in the table below is automatically created. See Template:Tool Queries for details. If newly linked pages do not appear here, click on "More" and "Refresh".)
Self researchers who used this tool |
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Alberto Frigo, Morris Villarroel, Debbie Chaves, David Albert, Thomas Blomseth Christiansen, Ellis Bartholomeus, Ulrich Atz, Dan Armstrong, Stuart Calimport, Stefan Hoevenaar, Evan Savage, Ian Eslick, Anne Prahl, Sara Riggare, Natasha Gajewski, Ben Blench, Yasmin Lucero, Alastair Tse |
We talked about this tool in the following meetings |
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