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Comparing the efficacy of different climate indices for prediction of labor loss, body temperatures, and thermal perception in a wide variety of warm and hot climates

George Havenith, James W. Smallcombe, Simon Hodder, Ollie Jay, Josh Foster

2024Journal of Applied Physiology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There is an urgent need to determine the optimal heat stress metric when forecasting the impact of heat stress on human performance, physiological stress, and perception. We analyzed a wealth of laboratory data, simulating heart rate (HR)-paced work with wide variations in air temperature, humidity, wind speed, solar radiation, and clothing. We conclude that the universal thermal climate index (UTCI) [followed by wet-bulb globe temperature (WBGT)] is the optimal heat index to reliably predict reductions in performance, and elevations in physiological and perceptual stress.

Topics & Concepts

Variety (cybernetics)PerceptionEnvironmental scienceClimate changeAtmospheric sciencesPsychologyStatisticsMathematicsBiologyEcologyGeologyNeuroscienceClimate Change and Health ImpactsThermoregulation and physiological responsesThermal Regulation in Medicine
Comparing the efficacy of different climate indices for prediction of labor loss, body temperatures, and thermal perception in a wide variety of warm and hot climates | Litcius