Metadata
Title
Human thermoregulation
Category
general
UUID
721ba2d3c4ce40eca62053e9bb663dbe
Source URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/human-thermoregulation/
Parent URL
https://volume.lboro.ac.uk/winning-its-all-about-teamwork/index.html
Crawl Time
2026-03-18T08:11:42+00:00
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Human thermoregulation

Source: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/human-thermoregulation/ Parent: https://volume.lboro.ac.uk/winning-its-all-about-teamwork/index.html

Protecting people: Optimising safety, effectiveness and comfort of work, clothing and built environments

Our research into human temperature regulation spans clothing comfort to the analysis of deaths due to heat stroke.

It has impacted policy and practice across a range of sectors including the military, sports, car manufacturing and building design. In addition, our novel approach to body mapping is now widely used within the scientific community.

Our impact

Improved human simulation models

Improved the applicability of indoor-climate design and evaluation standards

Underpinning evidence-based clothing design

*Heat Illness during SAS training*This film describes heat illness cases during military selection exercises in the UK

Watch the video

[Play

Sweating development during a one hour run](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YmPum1XH1bA)

[Play

Physiological responses and adaptations to exercise in the heat](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9LFeBV-vzdw)

The research

Our pioneering interdisciplinary work draws together expertise in sports science, ergonomics, textile science, and sport and protective clothing design – and has had wide ranging impact.

We have developed a significant body of knowledge in heat transfer from the human body through clothing, and advanced the areas of body mapping and thermoregulatory processes, including the interactions between clothing and thermoregulation.

We developed an understanding of the factors that determine whether we feel comfortable, hot or cold, dry or wet, and how we experience clothing and climates in this respect.

Our work has also enhanced the thermal manikins used to analyse the impacts of temperature on the human body spanning comfort to stressful experiences, both indoors and out.

Key recent developments include novel work focusing on how temperature impacts different population cohorts for example the sexes, various age groups as well as people with Multiple Sclerosis and spinal cord injuries.

Another significant aspect of our work has been around heat stress and heat related deaths within the Armed Forces, particularly during training exercises. Our findings have effected changes to safeguard against future fatalities.

The body maps of sweat production zones have made a tremendous contribution to our understanding of human performance and have enabled us to design better performing apparel.

Leading sportswear brand

### Environmental heating impacts millions of Europeans every summer

### It is estimated that >166,000 people died due to heatwaves (1998-2017)

The International Labour Organization’s report, Heat at work: Implications for safety and health (July 2024), draws extensively on research conducted by Professor George Havenith, Dr Simon Hodder and past members of their team.

Research funders

Development partners

Meet the experts

Professor George Havenith

Professor of Environmental Physiology and Ergonomics

Dr Simon Hodder

Senior Lecturer in Ergonomics / Human Factors

Dr Davide Filingeri

Former Lecturer

Now at the University of Southampton

Dr Alex Lloyd

Lecturer

Read more about George's research