Outdoor thermal physiology along human pathways: a study using a wearable measurement system
An outdoor summer study on thermal physiology along subjects’ pathways was conducted in a Japanese city using a unique wearable measurement system that measures all the relevant thermal variables: ambient temperature, humidity, wind speed ( U ) and short/long-wave radiation ( S and L ), along with s...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of biometeorology 2015-05, Vol.59 (5), p.503-515 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | An outdoor summer study on thermal physiology along subjects’ pathways was conducted in a Japanese city using a unique wearable measurement system that measures all the relevant thermal variables: ambient temperature, humidity, wind speed (
U
) and short/long-wave radiation (
S
and
L
), along with some physio-psychological parameters: skin temperature (
T
skin
), pulse rate, subjective thermal sensation and state of body motion.
U
,
S
and
L
were measured using a globe anemo-radiometer adapted use with pedestrian subjects. The subjects were 26 healthy Japanese adults (14 males, 12 females) ranging from 23 to 74 years in age. Each subject wore a set of instruments that recorded individual microclimate and physiological responses along a designated pedestrian route that traversed various urban textures. The subjects experienced varying thermal environments that could not be represented by fixed-point routine observational data.
S
fluctuated significantly reflecting the mixture of sunlit/shade distributions within complex urban morphology.
U
was generally low within urban canyons due to drag by urban obstacles such as buildings but the subjects’ movements enhanced convective heat exchanges with the atmosphere, leading to a drop in
T
skin
. The amount of sweating increased as standard effective temperature (SET*) increased. A clear dependence of sweating on gender and body size was found; males sweated more than females; overweight subjects sweated more than standard/underweight subjects.
T
skin
had a linear relationship with SET* and a similarly clear dependence on gender and body size differences.
T
skin
of the higher-sweating groups was lower than that of the lower-sweating groups, reflecting differences in evaporative cooling by perspiration. |
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ISSN: | 0020-7128 1432-1254 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00484-014-0864-y |