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Physiological response refers to the measurable reactions of the human body, such as changes in heart rate or skin conductance, that can be used to understand a users experience without relying on subjective assessments.
Increased Body Temperature The body responds by dissipating heat via: Activating sympathetic cholinergic fibers innervating sweat glands, leading to increased sweat and increased heat loss. Inhibiting sympathetic activity in blood vessels of the skin, causing blood to be shunted to the skin and an increased heat loss.
Thermoregulation is the maintenance of physiologic core body temperature by balancing heat generation with heat loss. A healthy individual will have a core body temperature of 37 +/- 0.5C (98.6 +/- 0.9F), the temperature range needed for the bodys metabolic processes to function correctly.
Physiological Equivalent Temperature The PET comfort index, derived from the human heat balance model, combines weather and thermo-physiological parameters (clothing and human activities).
PET is defined as the air temperature at which, in a typical indoor setting (without wind and solar radiation), the heat budget of the human body is balanced with the same core and skin temperature as under the complex outdoor conditions to be assessed.
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Physiological temperature regulation operates through responses that are independent of conscious voluntary behavior, such as controlling the rate of metabolic heat production (e.g., shivering) body heat distribution via the blood from the core to the skin (e.g.cutaneous vasodilation and constriction), and sweating.
The body responds by dissipating heat via: Activating sympathetic cholinergic fibers innervating sweat glands, leading to increased sweat and increased heat loss. Inhibiting sympathetic activity in blood vessels of the skin, causing blood to be shunted to the skin and an increased heat loss.

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