Body segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and 3D displacement and the estimation of heat balance during locomotion in hominins.

The conventional method of estimating heat balance during locomotion in humans and other hominins treats the body as an undifferentiated mass. This is problematic because the segments of the body differ with respect to several variables that can affect thermoregulation. Here, we report a study that...

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Main Authors: Alan Cross, Mark Collard, Andrew Nelson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2409965?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-87a1ecf8323642e2bcc2f718b1436d4e2020-11-24T21:12:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032008-01-0136e246410.1371/journal.pone.0002464Body segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and 3D displacement and the estimation of heat balance during locomotion in hominins.Alan CrossMark CollardAndrew NelsonThe conventional method of estimating heat balance during locomotion in humans and other hominins treats the body as an undifferentiated mass. This is problematic because the segments of the body differ with respect to several variables that can affect thermoregulation. Here, we report a study that investigated the impact on heat balance during locomotion of inter-segment differences in three of these variables: surface area, skin temperature and rate of movement. The approach adopted in the study was to generate heat balance estimates with the conventional method and then compare them with heat balance estimates generated with a method that takes into account inter-segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and rate of movement. We reasoned that, if the hypothesis that inter-segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and rate of movement affect heat balance during locomotion is correct, the estimates yielded by the two methods should be statistically significantly different. Anthropometric data were collected on seven adult male volunteers. The volunteers then walked on a treadmill at 1.2 m/s while 3D motion capture cameras recorded their movements. Next, the conventional and segmented methods were used to estimate the volunteers' heat balance while walking in four ambient temperatures. Lastly, the estimates produced with the two methods were compared with the paired t-test. The estimates of heat balance during locomotion yielded by the two methods are significantly different. Those yielded by the segmented method are significantly lower than those produced by the conventional method. Accordingly, the study supports the hypothesis that inter-segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and rate of movement impact heat balance during locomotion. This has important implications not only for current understanding of heat balance during locomotion in hominins but also for how future research on this topic should be approached.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2409965?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alan Cross
Mark Collard
Andrew Nelson
spellingShingle Alan Cross
Mark Collard
Andrew Nelson
Body segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and 3D displacement and the estimation of heat balance during locomotion in hominins.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Alan Cross
Mark Collard
Andrew Nelson
author_sort Alan Cross
title Body segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and 3D displacement and the estimation of heat balance during locomotion in hominins.
title_short Body segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and 3D displacement and the estimation of heat balance during locomotion in hominins.
title_full Body segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and 3D displacement and the estimation of heat balance during locomotion in hominins.
title_fullStr Body segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and 3D displacement and the estimation of heat balance during locomotion in hominins.
title_full_unstemmed Body segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and 3D displacement and the estimation of heat balance during locomotion in hominins.
title_sort body segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and 3d displacement and the estimation of heat balance during locomotion in hominins.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2008-01-01
description The conventional method of estimating heat balance during locomotion in humans and other hominins treats the body as an undifferentiated mass. This is problematic because the segments of the body differ with respect to several variables that can affect thermoregulation. Here, we report a study that investigated the impact on heat balance during locomotion of inter-segment differences in three of these variables: surface area, skin temperature and rate of movement. The approach adopted in the study was to generate heat balance estimates with the conventional method and then compare them with heat balance estimates generated with a method that takes into account inter-segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and rate of movement. We reasoned that, if the hypothesis that inter-segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and rate of movement affect heat balance during locomotion is correct, the estimates yielded by the two methods should be statistically significantly different. Anthropometric data were collected on seven adult male volunteers. The volunteers then walked on a treadmill at 1.2 m/s while 3D motion capture cameras recorded their movements. Next, the conventional and segmented methods were used to estimate the volunteers' heat balance while walking in four ambient temperatures. Lastly, the estimates produced with the two methods were compared with the paired t-test. The estimates of heat balance during locomotion yielded by the two methods are significantly different. Those yielded by the segmented method are significantly lower than those produced by the conventional method. Accordingly, the study supports the hypothesis that inter-segment differences in surface area, skin temperature and rate of movement impact heat balance during locomotion. This has important implications not only for current understanding of heat balance during locomotion in hominins but also for how future research on this topic should be approached.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2409965?pdf=render
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