2017
DOI: 10.4236/health.2017.96064
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Seasonal Differences of Psychological and Physiological Responses in Tropical Urban Climate

Abstract: This research aims to use the outdoor thermal environment evaluation index ETFe to quantify effects on the thermal sense of the human body of a tropical region climate with small annual temperature differences, and to examine seasonal differences in the thermal sense. Given that the average temperature of the earth is forecasted to rise, studying the effects on the human body from outdoor thermal environments in tropical regions is important for considering how to spend time outdoors in the future. This study … Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
(36 reference statements)
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“…Kurazumi et al [5] [6] [7] qualitatively clarified the effect that strong short wavelength solar radiation in tropical climates has on the thermal sensation of the human body when applying the outside thermal environment evaluation index ETFe [2]. It clarifies that in tropical areas where the effects of nighttime cooling cannot be expected, the effect of long-wave length thermal radiation is strong in the shade of objects made of materials with high heat capacity, and the effect of improving the thermal sensation of the human body through shade is low.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kurazumi et al [5] [6] [7] qualitatively clarified the effect that strong short wavelength solar radiation in tropical climates has on the thermal sensation of the human body when applying the outside thermal environment evaluation index ETFe [2]. It clarifies that in tropical areas where the effects of nighttime cooling cannot be expected, the effect of long-wave length thermal radiation is strong in the shade of objects made of materials with high heat capacity, and the effect of improving the thermal sensation of the human body through shade is low.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although it is possible to make calculations using a human shaped model [90], since there is little refer-ence material on contact points on the body for numerical thermal manikin and human body measurements have not been made, the validity of these cannot be verified. Also, the large effects of long-wavelength thermal radiation in outside environments have been confirmed from measurements made by Kurazumi et al [25] [26] [27]. Therefore, the previously mentioned radiant heat transfer area factor from each body part (effective radiation area factor) is a problem.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…In evaluating the outdoor environment, the psychological reaction of the human body is made the focus, and research quantitatively dealing with the heat balance of the human body is rare. The only studies that quantitatively investigate the influence on the human body using comprehensive thermal environment evaluation indices based on the heat balance of the outdoor environment as the axis of evaluation are those by Kurazumi et al [20]- [27].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Kurazumi et al [4][5][6] demonstrates the influence of an outdoor thermal environment on the human body with the outdoor thermal environment evaluation index ETFe [7] for the influence of a tropical climate with strong shortwave length solar radiation on the thermal sensation of the human body as the evaluation axis. It clarifies that in tropical areas where the effects of nighttime cooling cannot be expected, the effect of long-wave length thermal radiation is strong in the shade of objects made of materials with high heat capacity, and the effect of improving the thermal sensation of the human body through shade is low.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%