Journal
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOMETEOROLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 6, Pages 1055-1064Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00484-011-0519-1
Keywords
Heat acclimatization; Thermal sensation; Thermal comfort; Language; Behavioral thermoregulation
Funding
- Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [21247040]
- Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [21247040, 09J03584] Funding Source: KAKEN
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The purpose of this study was to explore whether there is evidence of heat acclimatization in the words used to express thermal sensation. A total of 458 urban Japanese and 601 Indonesians participated in a questionnaire. In addition, in a preliminary survey, 39 native English speakers in the UK participated. Our results showed that (1) for Indonesians, the closest thermal descriptor of a feeling of thermal comfort was 'cool' (75%) followed by 'slightly cool' (7%), 'slightly cold' (5%) and 'cold' (5%), while Japanese responses were distributed uniformly among descriptors 'cool', 'slightly cool', 'neither', 'slightly warm', and 'warm'; (2) the closest thermal descriptors of a feeling of discomfort for Indonesians were less affected by individual thermal susceptibility (vulnerability) than those for Japanese; (3) in the cases where 'cool' and 'slightly cold' were imagined in the mind, the descriptors were cognized as a thermal comfortable feeling by 97% and 57% of Indonesians, respectively; (4) the most frequently voted choice endorsing hot weather was 'higher than 32A degrees C' for Indonesians and 'higher than 29A degrees C' for Japanese respondents; for cold weather, 'lower than 15A degrees C' for Japanese and 'lower than 20A degrees C' for Indonesians. In summary, the descriptor 'cool' in Indonesians connotes a thermally comfortable feeling, but the inter-zone between hot and cold weather that was judged in the mind showed a upward shift when compared to that of Japanese. It is suggested that linguistic heat acclimatization exists on a cognitive level for Indonesians and is preserved in the words of thermal descriptors.
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