Sm. Frank et al., Relative contribution of core and cutaneous temperatures to thermal comfort and autonomic responses in humans, J APP PHYSL, 86(5), 1999, pp. 1588-1593
Subjective thermal comfort plays a critical role in body temperature regula
tion since this represents the primary stimulus for behavioral thermoregula
tion. Although both core (T-c) and skin-surface (T-sk) temperatures are kno
wn afferent inputs to the thermoregulatory system, the relative contributio
ns of T-c and T-sk to thermal comfort are unknown. We independently altered
T-c and T-sk in human subjects while measuring thermal comfort, vasomotor
changes, metabolic heat production, and systemic catecholaminergic response
s. Multiple linear regression was used to determine the relative T-c/T-sk c
ontribution to thermal comfort and the autonomic thermoregulatory responses
, by using the ratio of regression coefficients for T-c and T-sk. The T-c/T
-sk contribution ratio was relatively lower for thermal comfort (1:1) than
for vasomotor changes (3:1; P = 0.008), metabolic heat production (3.6:1; P
= 0.001), norepinephrine (1.8:1; P = 0.03), and epinephrine (3:1; P = 0.00
6) responses. Thus T-c and T-sk contribute about equally toward thermal com
fort, whereas T-c predominates in regulation of the autonomic and metabolic
responses.