I have now read the guidelines - I should have done so before and hope you can excuse this (this is my first time on a forum like this).
Obviously conductivity is a major variable when it comes to wood moisture, but that idea has been tested before. I was thinking that another variable could be different types of wood (oak, pine, maple, etc.), but I have yet to see what property they differ in.
Alternatively, I found out that wood is generally more dense in certain parts (called late wood) and less dense in other parts (early wood). This difference explains the familiar ring/line pattern we see in wood. I could then test how conductivity is altered by density?
Upon further research on moisture, I found that water forms hydrogen bonds with the hydrogen in the carbohydrate chains that make up wood (moisture works this way within the wood's cellulose).
I appreciate any insight, thanks again.