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Characteristics of the local cutaneous sensory thermoneutral zone
Skin temperature detection thresholds have been used to measure human cold and warm sensitivity across the temperature continuum. They exhibit a sensory zone within which neither warm nor cold sensations prevail. This zone has been widely assumed to coincide with steady state local skin temperatures...
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Main Authors: | , , |
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Format: | Default Article |
Published: |
2017
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/2134/24449 |
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Summary: | Skin temperature detection thresholds have been used to measure human cold and warm sensitivity across the temperature continuum. They exhibit a sensory zone within which neither warm nor cold sensations prevail. This zone has been widely assumed to coincide with steady state local skin temperatures between 32-34ᵒC, but its underlying neurophysiology has been rarely investigated. Here we employ two approaches to characterize the properties of sensory thermo-neutrality, testing for each whether neutrality shifts along the temperature continuum depending on adaptation to a preceding thermal state. The focus is on local spots of skin on the palm. Ten participants (30.3±4.8 y) underwent two experiments. Experiment 1 established the cold-to-warm inter-detection-threshold range for the palm’s glabrous skin, and its shift as a function of 3 starting skin temperatures (26, 31 or 36ᵒC). For the same conditions, Experiment 2 determined a thermally neutral zone centered around a thermally neutral point in which thermoreceptors’ activity is balanced. The zone was found to be narrow (~0.98 to ~1.33ᵒC) moving with the starting skin temperature over the temperature span 27.5-34.9ᵒC (Pearson r=33 0.94; p |
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