PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

The role of human behavior is critical for advancing comfort knowledge

The latest research and analysis on comfort and tips for creating a comfortable product, environment or system in product and environmental design are explored in a special supplement to the journal WORK

The role of human behavior is critical for advancing comfort knowledge
2021-03-01
(Press-News.org) Amsterdam, March 1, 2021 - Comfort is a daily human experience central to the perception of our environment and the continuous processing of sensory input. Environmental factors such as smell, temperature and light can influence comfort, as can our interaction with products, such as the design of a chair or a mattress. Increasingly, researchers investigating the science of comfort and discomfort are focusing on the role of human behavior. A special supplement to the journal WORK presents the latest advances, from optimal seat design in offices and transportation to the influence of smell on comfort and the interaction between time and comfort.

"This special supplement adds unique findings to comfort knowledge. It shows that not only is the environment or a product itself comfortable, but also that the comfort experience depends on the way the user interacts with the product or environment," explain Guest Editors Peter Vink, PhD, Faculty of Industrial Design Engineering, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands; Susanne Frohriep, PhD, Grammer AG, Ursensollen, Germany; Neil Mansfield, PhD, Department of Engineering, School of Science and Technology, Nottingham Trent University, UK; Alessandro Naddeo, PhD, Department of Industrial Engineering, University of Salerno, Fisciano, Italy; and Karen Jacobs, EdD, OT, OTR, CPE, Department of Occupational Therapy, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA, and Editor-in-Chief of WORK.

The supplement presents 26 peer-reviewed papers from the International Comfort Congress (2019) representing 99 authors and co-authors from 12 countries.

In their contribution to the supplement, Dr. Vink and his co-author Maxim Smulders, PhD candidate, also at the Faculty of Industrial Design Engineering, Delft University of Technology, note that comfort research that has no information on the behavior of participants can be incomplete, as major influencing factors can be missed. For example, a straight spine in the sagittal plane is sometimes considered ideal for sleeping, but in reality, humans have different preferred postures and change positions frequently in bed. They discuss how posture and movement can affect comfort.

Another study found that in self-driving cars, inattentive occupants move their heads relatively more, which may influence their perception of comfort. Other behavior factors that influence comfort include previous experience, distracting stimuli and time. Two studies found that when a person sits for a long time with no possibility to change posture, such as on an airplane or while taking an exam, comfort is reduced.

Among the environmental factors explored in this supplement is the relationship between scent and comfort. One study found that the scent of mandarin is liked by many people, but the preferred intensity varied. Another study found that olfactory comfort is as important as thermal comfort in overall perceived comfort in cars. Radiative heating panels are more energy efficient than air heating in cars and offer the same quality of comfort. High intensity light was found to reduce visual and cognitive fatigue and increase comfort in computer users.

Comfort factors related to the body's contact with products such as a floor, seat or bed are also discussed. The best design for a chair, based on several studies, is one that can be adjusted to various positions and buttock forms. A tilted backrest provides the most comfort for texting while in bed. Employees whose work requires that they stand for long periods of time may be more comfortable standing on a platform inclined between 5? and 10?.

The supplement includes an important contribution to future research in the field. Comfort is an individual and subjective concept, depending on the personal experience and state of the person over time. Questionnaires are important in the evaluation of a user's experience of comfort or discomfort over time, along with objective measurements. Selecting the most suitable questionnaire in comfort research for product design can be a challenge, even for experienced researchers. A workshop of 55 comfort experts reviewed a number of standard comfort or discomfort questionnaires to develop an instrument for questionnaire selection. The resulting list of Preferred Comfort Questionnaires (PCQ) for product design lets researchers select the most appropriate questionnaire depending on application, design phase and use case. "We expect the PCQ will be a useful instrument for researchers," says Dr. Vink, who was the lead investigator in the study.

In conclusion the Guest Editors observe that "Reporting these factors allows for better evaluation and comparison of comfort research results, which should contribute to an increase of scientific knowledge on discomfort."

INFORMATION:

ACCOMPANYING VIDEO: https://youtu.be/tM7tnDBKFmc


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
The role of human behavior is critical for advancing comfort knowledge

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mutant gene-targeted immunotherapy approach developed

2021-03-01
A novel targeted immunotherapy approach developed by researchers at the Ludwig Center, the Lustgarten Laboratory, and Bloomberg~Kimmel Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center employs new antibodies against genetically altered proteins to target cancers. The researchers targeted their immunotherapy approach to alterations in the common cancer-related p53 tumor suppressor gene, the RAS tumor-promoting oncogene or T-cell receptor genes. They also tested the therapy on cancer cells in the laboratory and in animal tumor models. Their findings are reported in three related studies published March 1 in Science Immunology, Science and Science Translational Medicine. Two ...

Transmission risk of COVID-19 from sewage spills into rivers can now be quickly quantified

2021-03-01
Scientists have identified that the COVID-19 virus could be transmitted through faecal contaminated river water. A team of researchers, including water quality, epidemiology, remote sensing and modelling experts, led by Dr Jamie Shutler at the University of Exeter, have developed a fast and simple way to assess the potential risk of water-borne transmission of the COVID-19 virus, posed by sewage spills into open and closed freshwater networks. The new study, published in the journal Environmental Science and Technology - Water, identifies the relative risk of viral transmission by sewerage spills, across 39 different counties. The study used information on the environment, a population's infection rate, and water usage to calculate the potential potency of ...

How a plant regulates its growth

How a plant regulates its growth
2021-03-01
Plants grow towards the light. This phenomenon, which already fascinated Charles Darwin, has been observed by everyone who owns houseplants. Thus, the plant ensures that it can make the best use of light to photosynthesize and synthesize sugars. Similarly, the roots grow into the soil to ensure that the plant is supplied with water and nutrients. These growth processes are controlled by a hormone called "auxin", which plays a key role in the formation of polarity in plants. To do this, auxin is transported in the plant body polar, from the shoot through the plant body into the roots. In this process, a family of polar transport proteins distributes the auxin throughout the plant. To ...

Oncotarget: Identification intermediate-risk subgroups in metastatic clear-cell renal cell carcinoma

Oncotarget: Identification intermediate-risk subgroups in metastatic clear-cell renal cell carcinoma
2021-03-01
The cover for issue 49 of Oncotarget features Figure 4, "CART-Tree analysis for overall survival in IMDC intermediate risk group," by Guida, et al.recently published in "Identification of international metastatic renal cell carcinoma database consortium (IMDC) intermediate-risk subgroups in patients with metastatic clear-cell renal cell carcinoma" which reported that as these patients have different prognosis, the aim of this study is to better characterize IR patients in order to better tailor the treatment. A multivariable Cox model with backward selection procedure and a Classification and Regression Tree analysis were performed to identify which prognostic factors were associated to OS in IR patients. Median OS for patients with ...

Oncotarget: Exploiting the metabolic dependencies of the broad amino acid transporter SLC6A14

Oncotarget: Exploiting the metabolic dependencies of the broad amino acid transporter SLC6A14
2021-03-01
Oncotarget recently published "Exploiting the metabolic dependencies of the broad amino acid transporter SLC6A14" which reported that Tumor cells typically enhance their metabolic capacity to sustain their higher rate of growth and proliferation. One way to elevate the nutrient intake into cancer cells is to increase the expression of genes encoding amino acid transporters, which may represent targetable vulnerabilities. The Oncotarget authors analyze the pattern of transcriptional changes in a panel of breast cancer cell lines upon metabolic stress and found that SLC6A14 expression levels are increased in the absence of methionine. Methionine deprivation, which can be achieved via modulation of dietary methionine intake in tumor cells, in turn leads to a heightened ...

Oncotarget: Effect of liver fibrosis on survival in patients with intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma

Oncotarget: Effect of liver fibrosis on survival in patients with intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma
2021-03-01
Oncotarget recently published "Effect of liver fibrosis on survival in patients with intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma: a SEER population-based study" which reported that the impact of fibrosis on overall and cancer-specific survival 12, 36, and 60 months following diagnosis, was evaluated in the entire cohort and in subgroups stratified according to treatment approach and the American Joint Committee on Cancer tumor stage using a Cox proportional-hazards model. After adjusting for age, sex, race, year of diagnosis, AJCC stage, and surgical treatment strategy, advanced fibrosis was associated with worse cancer-specific survival across follow-up periods. Similar effects were observed for overall survival. Among patients that underwent surgical resection, ...

AI shows public attitude toward COVID-19 is more 'infectious' than disease itself

2021-03-01
CHICAGO --- Public attitude toward COVID-19 and its treatments is more "infectious" than the disease itself, according to a new Northwestern Medicine study using Artificial Intelligence (AI) to analyze tweets about the virus. Researchers studied the influence of Twitter on COVID-19 health beliefs as well as the competing influence of scientific evidence versus the speeches of politicians. The study's key findings: People's biases are magnified when they read tweets about COVID-19 from other users, and the more times it has been retweeted, the more they tend to believe it and retweet it themselves. Scientific ...

Medical school curriculum takes aim at social determinants of health

2021-03-01
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - March 1, 2021 - There is a growing recognition in health care that social factors such as racial bias, access to care and housing and food insecurity, have a significant impact on people's health. Compounding and amplifying those underlying inequalities are the ongoing disruptions related to the COVID-19 pandemic and social unrest in our country. Although many health care organizations (National Academy of Medicine, American College of Physicians and the American Academy of Pediatrics) currently recommend that screening for social determinants of health (SDH) be included in clinical care, medical education has lagged ...

COVID-19 RCTs registered in 1st 100 days of pandemic

2021-03-01
What The Study Did: Researchers assessed the recruitment and results reporting of randomized clinical trials (RCTs) to treat or prevent COVID-19 registered within 100 days of the first case reported to the World Health Organization. Authors: Lars G. Hemkens, M.D., M.P.H., of the University Hospital Basel in Basel, Switzerland, is the corresponding author. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.0330) Editor's Note: The article includes conflict of interest and funding/support disclosures. Please ...

High-performance electrocatalysts to propel development of direct ethanol fuel cells

High-performance electrocatalysts to propel development of direct ethanol fuel cells
2021-03-01
Researchers from the Institute of Process Engineering (IPE) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Nanjing Normal University recently reported a strategy for boosting the electrocatalytic performance of palladium (Pd) in ethanol oxidation reaction, the key anodic reaction of direct ethanol fuel cells (DEFCs), offering a rational concept for finely engineering the surface of electrocatalysts used in high-efficiency energy conversion devices and beyond. The study was published in Cell Reports Physical Science on Mar. 1. DEFCs, with ethanol as fuel, have the advantage of high energy density, low toxicity and easy operation. However, the lack of active and robust electrocatalysts ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Black women hospitalised in USA with blood infection resistant to last-resort antibiotic at increased risk of death

NEC Society Statement on the Watson vs. Mead Johnson Verdict

Lemur’s lament: When one vulnerable species stalks another

Surf clams off the coast of Virginia reappear – and rebound

Studying optimization for neuromorphic imaging and digital twins

ORNL researchers win Best Paper award for nickel-based alloy tailoring

New beta-decay measurements in mirror nuclei pin down the weak nuclear force

Study uncovers neural mechanisms underlying foraging behavior in freely moving animals

Gene therapy is halting cancer. Can it work against brain tumors?

New copper-catalyzed C-H activation strategy from Scripps Research

New compound from blessed thistle promotes functional nerve regeneration

Auburn’s McCrary Institute, ORNL to partner on first regional cybersecurity center to protect the nation’s electricity grid

New UNC-Chapel Hill study examines the increased adoption of they/them pronouns

Groundbreaking study reveals potential diagnostic marker for multiple sclerosis years before symptom onset

Annals of Internal Medicine presents breaking scientific news at ACP’s Internal Medicine Meeting 2024

Scientists discover new way to extract cosmological information from galaxy surveys

Shoe technology reduces risk of diabetic foot ulcers

URI-led team finds direct evidence of ‘itinerant breeding’ in East Coast shorebird species

Wayne State researcher aims to improve coding peer review practices

Researchers develop a new way to safely boost immune cells to fight cancer

Compact quantum light processing

Toxic chemicals from microplastics can be absorbed through skin

New research defines specific genomic changes associated with the transmissibility of the monkeypox virus

Registration of biological pest control products exceeds that of agrochemicals in Brazil

How reflecting on gratitude received from family can make you a better leader

Wearable technology assesses surgeons’ posture during surgery

AATS and CRF® partner on New York Valves: The structural heart summit

Postpartum breast cancer and survival in women with germline BRCA pathogenic variants

Self-administered acupressure for probable knee osteoarthritis in middle-aged and older adults

2024 Communicator Award goes to “Cyber and the City” research team based in Tübingen

[Press-News.org] The role of human behavior is critical for advancing comfort knowledge
The latest research and analysis on comfort and tips for creating a comfortable product, environment or system in product and environmental design are explored in a special supplement to the journal WORK