Panorama internacional da aliestesia no contexto do conforto térmico humano

Autores

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.46421/entac.v20i1.6208

Palavras-chave:

Aliestesia, Conforto térmico, Percepção térmica, Estímulos sensoriais, Espaços abertos

Resumo

A aliestesia é um fenômeno psicológico e fisiológico que apresenta a relação entre o estado interno de um organismo e a sensação de prazer ou desprazer percebido a partir dos estímulos recebidos. Este termo foi desenvolvido na década de 1970, a fim de descrever como a percepção dos estímulos sensoriais varia o estado do indivíduo. Desde 2010 passou a ser analisada a relação desse tópico com o conforto térmico. O objetivo deste estudo consiste na análise bibliométrica dos termos “aliestesia” e “conforto térmico” na base de dados Scopus. O estudo apresenta a realidade dessa temática no âmbito internacional e demonstra a lacuna de conhecimento no cenário nacional. O método utilizado fundamenta-se nos dados coletados na base científica selecionada, sendo que estão expostos no estudo a amostra obtida, os estudos desenvolvidos no decorrer do tempo, os anos de publicação, os principais autores, as áreas em que mais são desenvolvidas pesquisas sobre essa temática, os países que mais a realizam com esse tema, além de apresentar os assuntos correlacionados e as palavras-chave utilizadas. O estudo realizado demonstra que ainda é incipiente o desenvolvimento dessa temática no Brasil.

Biografia do Autor

Luísa Alcantara, Universidade Tecnológica Federal do Paraná

Mestrado em Arquitetura e Urbanismo pela Universidade Federal de Pelotas. Doutoranda em Sustentabilidade Ambiental Urbana na Universidade Tecnológica Federal do Paraná (Curitiba - PR, Brasil).

Eduardo Krüger, Universidade Tecnológica Federal do Paraná

Doutorado em Arquitetura pela Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universität Hannover. Professor Titular na Universidade Tecnológica Federal do Paraná (Curitiba - PR, Brasil). 

Referências

CABANAC, M.; Physiological Role of Pleasure: A stimulus can feel pleasant or unpleasant depending upon its usefulness as determined by internal signals. Science, v. 173, n. 4002, p. 1103-1107, 1971.

ATTIA, M.; ENGEL, P. A field study of thermal stress and recovery using thermoregulatory behavioral and physiological indicators. International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health, v. 47, p. 21-33, 1980.

ATTIA, M.; ENGEL, P.; HILDEBRANDT, G. Thermal comfort during work: a function of time of day. International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health, v. 45, p. 205-215, 1980.

ATTIA, M.; ENGEL, P.; HILDEBRANDT, G. Quantification of thermal comfort parameters using a behavioural indicator. Physiology & Behavior, v. 24, n. 5, p. 901-909, 1980.

ATTIA, M.; ENGEL, P. Thermal pleasantness sensation: an indicator of thermal stress. European Journal of Applied Physiology and Occupational Physiology, v. 50, p. 55-70, 1982.

ATTIA, M.; ENGEL, P. Thermal alliesthesial response in man is independent of skin location stimulated. Physiology & behavior, v. 27, n. 3, p. 439-444, 1981.

DE DEAR, R. The theory of thermal comfort in naturally ventilated indoor environments - “the pleasure principle”. International Journal of Ventilation, v. 8, n. 3, p. 243-250, 2009.

DE DEAR, R. Towards a theory of adaptive thermal comfort-the pleasure principle. In: 9th International Healthy Buildings Conference and Exhibition, HB 2009. 2009.

CÂNDIDO, C. et al. Air movement acceptability limits and thermal comfort in Brazil's hot humid climate zone. Building and environment, v. 45, n. 1, p. 222-229, 2010.

DE DEAR, R. Thermal Comfort in Natural Ventilation: a neurophysiological hypothesis. In: 2010 Windsor Conference: Adapting to Change: New Thinking on Comfort. 2010.

DE DEAR, R. Revisiting an old hypothesis of human thermal perception: alliesthesia. Building Research & Information, v. 39, n. 2, p. 108-117, 2011.

PARKINSON, T. Thermal Pleasure and Alliesthesia in the Built Environment. Ph.D. University of Sydney, 2016.

HÖPPE, P. Different aspects of assessing indoor and outdoor thermal comfort. Energy and buildings, v. 34, n. 6, p. 661-665, 2002.

LAI, D. et al.; A comprehensive review of thermal comfort studies in urban open spaces. Science of the Total Environment, v. 742, p. 140092, 2020.

LAI, D.; ZHOU, X.; CHEN, Q.; Modelling dynamic thermal sensation of human subjects in outdoor environments. Energy and Buildings, v. 149, p. 16-25, 2017.

JOHANSSON, E. et al. Outdoor thermal comfort in public space in warm-humid Guayaquil, Ecuador. International journal of biometeorology, v. 62, p. 387-399, 2018.

LAI, D. et al. Studies of outdoor thermal comfort in northern China. Building and environment, v. 77, p. 110-118, 2014.

SPAGNOLO, J.; DE DEAR, R.; A field study of thermal comfort in outdoor and semi-outdoor environments in subtropical Sydney Australia. Building and environment, v. 38, n. 5, p. 721-738, 2003.

YAHIA, M. W.; JOHANSSON, E.; Evaluating the behaviour of different thermal indices by investigating various outdoor urban environments in the hot dry city of Damascus, Syria. International journal of biometeorology, v. 57, p. 615-630, 2013.

YAO, J. et al. The effect of personal and microclimatic variables on outdoor thermal comfort: A field study in a cold season in Lujiazui CBD, Shanghai. Sustainable Cities and Society, v. 39, p. 181-188, 2018.

BECKER, S.; POTCHTER, O.; YAAKOV, Y.; Calculated and observed human thermal sensation in an extremely hot and dry climate. Energy and Buildings, v. 35, n. 8, p. 747-756, 2003.

PARKINSON, T.; DE DEAR, R. Thermal pleasure in built environments: spatial alliesthesia from contact heating. Building Research & Information, v. 44, n. 3, p. 248-262, 2016.

PARKINSON, T.; DE DEAR, R.; Thermal pleasure in built environments: spatial alliesthesia from air movement. Building Research & Information, v. 45, n. 3, p. 320-335, 2017.

HANNA, E.G.; TAIT, P.W. Limitations to thermoregulation and acclimatization challenge human adaptation to global warming. International journal of environmental research and public health, v. 12, n. 7, p. 8034-8074, 2015.

WIDERYNSKI, S. et al. Use of cooling centers to prevent heat-related illness: summary of evidence and strategies for implementation. 1917.

MARANS, R.W. Quality of urban life studies: An overview and implications for environment-behaviour research. Procedia-Social and Behavioral Sciences, v. 35, p. 9-22, 2012.

RANJBAR-SAHRAEI, B.; NEGENBORN, R. Research Positioning & Trend Identification: a data-analytics toolbox. Delft University of Technology, 2017.

VELLEI, M. et al. Dynamic thermal perception: A review and agenda for future experimental research. Building and Environment, v. 205, p. 108269, 2021.

DZYUBAN, Y. et al. Outdoor thermal comfort research in transient conditions: A narrative literature review. Landscape and Urban Planning, v. 226, p. 104496, 2022.

CHATTERJEE, A.; KHOVALYG, D. Dynamic indoor thermal environment using reinforcement learning-based controls: Opportunities and challenges. Building and Environment, p. 110766, 2023.

ZHANG, H.; ARENS, E.; ZHAI, Y. A review of the corrective power of personal comfort systems in non-neutral ambient environments. Building and Environment, v. 91, p. 15-41, 2015.

PARKINSON, T.; DE DEAR, R. Thermal pleasure in built environments: physiology of alliesthesia. Building Research & Information, v. 43, n. 3, p. 288-301, 2015.

Downloads

Publicado

2024-10-07

Como Citar

ALCANTARA, Luísa; KRÜGER, Eduardo. Panorama internacional da aliestesia no contexto do conforto térmico humano. In: ENCONTRO NACIONAL DE TECNOLOGIA DO AMBIENTE CONSTRUÍDO, 20., 2024. Anais [...]. Porto Alegre: ANTAC, 2024. p. 1–12. DOI: 10.46421/entac.v20i1.6208. Disponível em: https://eventos.antac.org.br/index.php/entac/article/view/6208. Acesso em: 22 dez. 2024.

Edição

Seção

Conforto Ambiental e Eficiência Energética

Artigos mais lidos pelo mesmo(s) autor(es)

1 2 > >> 

Artigos Semelhantes

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >> 

Você também pode iniciar uma pesquisa avançada por similaridade para este artigo.