Physiological reactions to different vertical (head-foot) air temperature differences.

Six healthy male subjects were exposed to different vertical air temperature differences between the upper and lower parts of the body for 90 min, wearing light clothing. The lower part of the body was exposed to an air temperature of 25°C and the upper part of the body to air temperatures of 15, 20, 25, 30 or 35°C. The preferred air temperature was different from those for uniform experimental conditions found by other investigators. The thermal sensations on the upper part of the body and the whole body were similar, and those on the lower part of the body were almost constant under each condition. From the relationship between thermal sensation and mean skin temperature, subjects may feel thermal neutrality at a slightly lower mean skin temperature, when the lower part of the body is at a comfortable temperature, than when both upper and lower parts of the body are exposed to the same temperature. The lower part of the body was exposed to thermally neutral condition and the skin temperatures of the low...

[1]  P O Fanger,et al.  The skin temperature distribution for resting man in comfort. , 1973, Archives des sciences physiologiques.

[2]  A. Durotoye,et al.  Effect of environment on temperatures in the viscera of the dog , 1971, International journal of biometeorology.

[3]  Keiichi Yoshida Studies on the Thermal Comfort , 1978 .

[4]  L. P. Herrington,et al.  THE INFLUENCE OF CLOTHING ON THE PHYSIOLOGICAL REACTIONS OF THE HUMAN BODY TO VARYING ENVIRONMENTAL TEMPERATURES , 1938 .

[5]  R. Goldsmith,et al.  Cutaneous vasomotor control in the human head, neck and upper chest , 1962, The Journal of physiology.

[6]  J. Frim,et al.  Effect of cold exposure on various sites of core temperature measurements. , 1983, Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology.

[7]  J. Chung,et al.  Effect of isolated head heating and cooling on sweating in man. , 1975, Aviation, space, and environmental medicine.

[8]  Brown Ga,et al.  The effect of head cooling on deep body temperature and thermal comfort in man. , 1982 .

[9]  J. Grayson COLD AND WARMTH VASOCONSTRICTOR RESPONSES IN THE SKIN OF MAN , 1951, British heart journal.

[10]  James D. Hardy,et al.  The technic of measuring radiation and convection , 1938 .

[11]  John H. Page,et al.  Effect of Heating and Cooling the Legs on Hand and Forearm Blood Flow in the Eskimo , 1953 .

[12]  J. Leblanc,et al.  Autonomic nervous system and adaptation to cold in man. , 1975, Journal of applied physiology.

[13]  J. Mead,et al.  Individual differences in vascular responses and their relationship to cold tolerance. , 1950, Journal of applied physiology.

[14]  M. Benzinger,et al.  Tympanic clinical temperature. , 1972 .