1. Chinese older people's subjective and physiological responses to moderate cold and warm temperature steps
- Author
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Zi Wang, Hang Yu, Yu Jiao, Maohui Luo, and Xiangyang Chu
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Environmental Engineering ,Geography, Planning and Development ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Thermal comfort ,Poison control ,Skin temperature ,02 engineering and technology ,Building and Construction ,010501 environmental sciences ,Thermal sensation ,Audiology ,01 natural sciences ,Moderate temperature ,Physiological responses ,medicine ,021108 energy ,Tympanic temperature ,Older people ,Psychology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Civil and Structural Engineering - Abstract
Older people are very likely to experience transitions among spaces with different temperatures in daily life. But little has been known about their thermal comfort and physiological responses to these temperature steps. This study investigated 18 healthy older people's thermal perceptions and physiological parameters under cold and warm exposures with 3/5/6 °C temperature steps. The results showed that subjects' thermal sensation was sensitive to all moderate temperature steps, but their thermal comfort perception could only distinguish temperature changes greater than 5 °C. Thermal unacceptability was only observed when subjects' tympanic temperature reached at 37.08 °C. Also, we found older people need more than 50 min time to get their mean skin temperature steady after cold stimuli, while they only need
- Published
- 2019
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