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85 results on '"Skin wetness"'

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1. Mechanism underlying the influence of humidity on thermal comfort and stress under mimicked working conditions.

2. Why Wet Feels Wet? An Investigation Into the Neurophysiology of Human Skin Wetness Perception

3. Analysis of sweating efficiency and its effects on the heat strain alleviation of clothed subjects.

4. Analysis of sweating efficiency and its effects on the heat strain alleviation of clothed subjects.

5. Sensitivity analysis of the effect of airflow velocity on the thermal comfort in underground mines

6. Analysis of sweating efficiency and its effects on the heat strain alleviation of clothed subjects

7. Analysis of sweating efficiency and its effects on the heat strain alleviation of clothed subjects

8. The Effect of Absorbent Pad Design on Skin Wetness, Skin/Pad Microclimate, and Skin Barrier Function

9. Measurement of Liquid Transport Properties of Sanitary Napkin with Modified Forced Flow Water Transport Tester

10. Analysis of sweating efficiency and its effects on the heat strain alleviation of clothed subjects

11. Analysis of sweating efficiency and its effects on the heat strain alleviation of clothed subjects

12. Absolute Temperature Thresholds for Detection of Skin Wetness and Dampness on the Hand and their Variation with Sex and Age

13. Ageing reduces skin wetness sensitivity across the body

14. Skin wetness detection thresholds and wetness magnitude estimations of the human index fingerpad and their modulation by moisture temperature

15. Electrical Resistance of Stainless Steel/Polyester Blended Knitted Fabrics for Application to Measure Sweat Quantity

16. Warm temperature stimulus suppresses the perception of skin wetness during initial contact with a wet surface.

17. Prediction of mean skin temperature for use as a heat strain scale by introducing an equation for sweating efficiency.

18. The development and initial validation of a virtual dripping sweat rate and a clothing wetness ratio for use in predictive heat strain models.

19. Thermal and tactile interactions in the perception of local skin wetness at rest and during exercise in thermo-neutral and warm environments.

20. Increased skin wetness independently augments cool-seeking behaviour during passive heat stress

21. The role of decreasing contact temperatures and skin cooling in the perception of skin wetness.

22. Human wetness perception of fabrics under dynamic skin contact

23. Thermal comfort of rural residents in a hot–humid area

24. Effect of Fiber Type, Water Content, and Velocity on Wetness Perception by the Volar Forearm Test: Stimulus Intensity Test

25. Thermosensory mapping of skin wetness sensitivity across the body of young males and females at rest and following maximal incremental running

26. Neurophysiology of Skin Thermal Sensations

27. Hybrid cooling clothing to improve thermal comfort of office workers in a hot indoor environment

28. The Zero Heat Flux Method and Sweat Loss Modeling in Sports: Attempts of Next Generation Sports Information Systems

29. Sensitivity analysis of the effect of airflow velocity on the thermal comfort in underground mines

30. Dry mist systems and its impact on thermal comfort for the tropics

31. The effect of dynamic friction with wet fabrics on skin wetness perception

32. Assessing the accumulated stickiness magnitude from fabric–skin friction: effect of wetness level of various fabrics

33. Wireless and Flexible Skin Moisture and Temperature Sensor Sheets toward the Study of Thermoregulator Center.

34. Comparing visual and objective skin assessment with pressure injury risk

35. Human skin wetness perception: psychophysical and neurophysiological bases

36. Body mapping of cutaneous wetness perception across the human torso during thermo-neutral and warm environmental exposures

37. The biology of skin wetness perception and its implications in manual function and for reproducing complex somatosensory signals in neuroprosthetics

38. The Neurophysiology and Assessment of Human Skin Wetness Perception

39. Why wet feels wet? A neurophysiological model of human cutaneous wetness sensitivity

40. Warm temperature stimulus suppresses the perception of skin wetness during initial contact with a wet surface

41. Thermal and tactile interactions in the perception of local skin wetness at rest and during exercise in thermo-neutral and warm environments

42. The role of decreasing contact temperatures and skin cooling in the perception of skin wetness

43. The effect of clothing fit and material of women’s Islamic sportswear on physiological and subjective responses during exercise in warm and humid environment

44. Differences in comfort perception in relation to local and whole body skin wettedness

45. Potential of Using Infrared Thermography for Determination of Skin Wetness and Thus Perceived Thermal Comfort of Pigs

46. Effects of thermal and moisture transport properties of T-shirts on wearer’s comfort sensations

47. Dye exclusion as a means to measure wetness protection of human skin

48. Decreasing the tactile interaction between skin, sweat and clothing significantly reduces the perception of wetness independently of the level of physical skin wetness during moderate exercise

49. Tactile cues significantly modulate the perception of sweat-induced skin wetness independently of the level of physical skin wetness

50. Regional differences in the cutaneous thermal sensitivity to wetness across the torso (1104.10)

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