Abstract
(1) Primordial lesioning and stimulation experiments established a thermoregulatory centre in the rostral brain stem at the end of the 19th century. (2) A major landmark in understanding how deep-body temperature ( T c) is sensed, came in 1912 when Barbour found that changing rostral brain stem temperature inversely raised or lowered T c, ultimately leading to a mono-centric concept of hypothalamic thermoregulation, prevailing for about 50 years. (3) The discovery of extrahypothalamic sites of temperature signal generation in the 1960s led to the multiple-input, multiple-controller concept of thermoregulation. (4) During the last 40 years, concepts concerning thermosensory specificity have radically changed from viewing bimodal peripheral thermoreceptors and hypothalamic thermoreceptors as the only relevant signal generators towards a complex picture including monomodality of peripheral warm and cold thermoreceptors and multimodality of deep-body thermosensors.
Published Version
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