Abstract
Human metabolic rate is a fundamental and essential aspect of thermal comfort, and gender differences in metabolic rate may underlie gender differences in comfort. This study explores gender differences in physiological and subjective responses to a wide range of cold to hot temperatures. Forty healthy college students (20 females and 20 males) participated in the experiments. Subjects were sedentary, wearing 0.6 clo, staying at 26 °C for 30 min, then exposed to either at cool (14, 16, 18, 20 °C), neutral (24, 26 °C), or warm (28, 30, 32, and 34 °C) temperatures for 90 min. Both subjective questionnaires (thermal sensation, thermal comfort, thermal acceptability) and physiological measurements (metabolic rate, skin temperature, skin blood flow, and skin wettedness) were collected during the exposures. Females tend to have lower metabolic rates than males at all temperatures, although significant differences were only found at 14, 16, and 18 °C. Females tend to be cooler and less comfortable than males at cool temperatures, which could be explained by the lower metabolic rates and lower skin temperatures in females. Males tend to be warmer and less comfortable at warm temperatures, which could be explained by higher metabolic rates and higher skin wettedness in males. No significant gender differences in subjective or physiological responses were found at neutral conditions.
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