ASHRAE NA-04-2-4-2004 Do People Like to Feel Neutral Response to the ASHRAE Scale for Subjective Warmth in Relation to Thermal Preference Indoor and Outdoor Temperature《为了回应ASHRA.pdf
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1、NA-04-2-4 Do People Like to Feel “Neutral”? Response to the ASHRAE Scale of Subjective Warmth in Relation to Thermal Preference, Indoor and Outdoor Temperature Michael A. Humphreys J. Fergus Nicol ABSTRACT This analysis explores a discrepancy between “neutral on the ASHRAE scale and refer no change”
2、 on a thermal preference scale. The data employed are from numerous field studies drawn from two large databases. Multivariate analysis showed thai the ASHRAE scale vote depended not only on the recognized thermal variables but also on the outdoor temper- ature, while the thermal preference vote was
3、 relatively little influenced by outdoor temperature. Of respondents who desired “no change” in their thermal state, many had a ther- malsensation other than neutral. Ifthe indoor temperature was warm, their preferred sensation tended to be slightly warmer than “neutral, while ifthe outdoor temperat
4、ure was high, the preferredsensation tended to be slightly cooler than “neutral. Each eflect was about one-third of a unit of the ASHRAE scale. Some implications for research and practice are discussed. INTRODUCTION Scales of Subjective Warmth Early researchers in thermal comfort used a variety of s
5、cales for recording warmth, but, by the 1970s, two scales had become dominant, and both of them had seven categories. The ASHRAE scale was developed during research for ASHVE (American Society of Heating and Ventilating Engi- neers; later became ASHRAE). The central category was orig- inally labeled
6、 “comfortable,” but this was later changed to “neutral,” and so, in its current form, the scale has no overt reference to comfort. Nevertheless, it is usually assumed that the three central categories indicate the zone of thermal comfort, an assumption incorporated in the construction of the PMV and
7、 PPD indices (Fanger 1970). The Bedford scale was normally used in British and Commonwealth countries. It arose from Bedfords magisterial field study of the winter warmth of workers in light industry (Bedford 1936). The scale (Table 2) combines warmth and comfort. Each ofthe three central categories
8、 carries a label that indicates comfort, while the others indicate discomfort. McIntyre (1 978) compared the properties of various seven-point scales of warmth, using data from numerous experiments conducted in a climate-controlled room. He Table 1. The Categories of the ASHRAE Scale 0 Hot O Warm 0
9、Slightly warm 0 Neutral 0 Slightly cool o Cool 0 Cold Table 2. The Categories of the Bedford Scale 0 Much too warm 0 Too warm 0 Comfortably warm 0 Comfortable 0 Comfortably cool 0 Too cool 0 Much too cool Michael A. Humphreys is a research professor at the Oxford Centre for Sustainable Development,
10、Oxford Brookes University, U.K., and a research fellow at the Centre for Christianity and Culture, Regents Park College, University of Oxford. J. Fergus Nicol is a research professor both at the Oxford Centre for Sustainable Development, Oxford Brookes University, U.K., and at London Metropolitan Un
11、iversity. 02004 ASHRAE. 569 concluded that the properties of the ASHRAE scale and the Bedford scale were similar. De Dear (e.g., de Dear 1985) compared the two scales during fieldwork in Australia and found that in practice the scales were interchangeable. These results strengthened the presumption
12、that the three centrai categories of the ASHRAE scale could be taken to indicate a state of thermal comfort, for they corresponded to the three “comfortable” categories of the Bedford scale. Scales of Thermal Preference A scale of thermal preference indicates whether people would prefer a warmer or
13、a cooler condition, and so it may be used to locate more precisely where within in the comfort zone the optimum point might be. Fox used the Bedford scale in a study of the elderly in the U.K. winter and supplemented it with a question to probe their thermal preferences (Fox et al. 1973). The scale
14、had five categories. Fox noticed that some people who said they were “comfortable” nevertheless would have preferred a warmer condition; the central category of the Bedford scale was not necessarily optimal. Humphreys (1975) compared the findings of numerous field studies of thermal comfort from var
15、ious climates. He suggested that discrepancies between the temperature the vari- ous populations found comfortable and the expectations from thermal physiology could be reconciled to some extent if people in hot climates preferred to feel slightly cooler than neutral, while people in cold climates p
16、referred to feel slightly warmer. McIntyre (1980) tested this suggestion and found that a sample of British office workers who voted “neutral” in winter would, on the whole, have preferred a condition slightly warmer than neutral, while a sample of Americans in summer would have preferred a conditio
17、n slightly cooler. McIntyre used a three-point scale of thermal preference (Table 3). Scales of thermal preference have not settled down to an agreed number of categories. Most researchers use the three- point McIntyre scale, but Nicol, following Fox, prefers a five- point preference scale (e.g., Ni
18、col et al. 1994), while Oseland (1 997) used a seven-point scale. Recent research has confirmed that a preferred tempera- ture obtained from the preference scale sometimes differs from a corresponding neutral temperature obtained from a seven-point scale of warmth. Nicol et al. (1994) reported diffe
19、rences of a degree centigrade or so for summer data from Pakistan. He had used a seven-point semantic differential scale of subjective warmth, with the central category labeled “comfort.” Feriadi and Wong (2002), using the ASHRAE scale, reported a larger difference, some 3”C, for people in their own
20、 homes in Indonesia. De Dear (de Dear et al. 1997), Table 3. Mclntyres Scale of Thermal Preference I would like to be: OWarmer UNO change OCooier comparing numerous field studies of thermal comfort from various countries, found that, although the differences were usually small, there could be a diff
21、erence of up to 3C between the neutral and the preferred temperatures in a particular set of data. The systematic dependence ofthese discrepancies on the climate was slight. For people in air-conditioned buildings, the effect of climate was statistically significant but very small, while for people
22、in naturally ventilated buildings, it was perhaps larger, but more scattered and not statistically signif- icant. The difference did, however, vary substantially with the mean indoor temperature for people in air-conditioned build- ings, but again it was not significant for those in naturally ventil
23、ated buildings. De Dears analysis pooled studies that used the ASHRAE scale, the Bedford scale, and the seven-point semantic differ- ential scale. Although their broad similarity has indeed been established, these scales differ in the wording of their central category (“neutral,” “comfortable,” and
24、“comfort,” respec- tively), and each may therefore bear a slightly different rela- tion to the preference scale. It could be that a clearer pattern would emerge if the scales were examined separately. This paper aims to quanti the relation between climate, indoor temperature, and the preferred point
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