Office workers’ preferences for air movement have been extracted from a database of indoor environmental quality surveys performed in over 200 buildings. Dissatisfaction with the amount of air motion is very common, with too little air movement cited far more commonly than too much air movement.Workers were also surveyed in a detailed two-season study of a single naturally ventilated building. About half the building’s population wanted more air movement and only 4% wanted less. This same ratio applied when the air movement in workspaces was higher than 0.2 m/s, the de facto draft limit in the current ASHRAE and ISO thermal environment standards. Preference for “less air motion” exceeded that for “more” only at thermal sensations of -2 (coo...
Air temperature thresholds are investigated and proposed for acceptable comfort in air-conditioned b...
This study explores the interaction between perceived and calculated thermal comfort in Iranian offi...
Often, building assessments do not account for users' social concerns in relation to buildings' phys...
Office workers’ preferences for air movement have been extracted from the ASHRAE database of indoor ...
Office workers’ preferences for air movement have been extracted from the ASHRAE database of indoor ...
Air movement is one of the six main variables determirzing human thermal comfort; air temperature, r...
In the ASHRAE comfort database [1], underpinning the North American naturally ventilated adaptive co...
Moving air has long been used to provide comfort in warm environments. Provision for indoor air move...
Much has been done in order to understand when air movement enhancement is unwelcome. Traditionally,...
Much has been done in order to understand when air movement enhancement is unwelcome. Traditionally,...
The influence of thermal parameters (air velocity, air velocity fluctuations, and air temperature) o...
This paper compares occupants’ thermal response to naturally-ventilated and air-conditioned offices ...
This paper compares occupants’ thermal response to naturally-ventilated and air-conditioned offices ...
This study presents the findings of the significance between thermal comfort and air movement percep...
This study explores the interaction between perceived and calculated thermal comfort in Iranian offi...
Air temperature thresholds are investigated and proposed for acceptable comfort in air-conditioned b...
This study explores the interaction between perceived and calculated thermal comfort in Iranian offi...
Often, building assessments do not account for users' social concerns in relation to buildings' phys...
Office workers’ preferences for air movement have been extracted from the ASHRAE database of indoor ...
Office workers’ preferences for air movement have been extracted from the ASHRAE database of indoor ...
Air movement is one of the six main variables determirzing human thermal comfort; air temperature, r...
In the ASHRAE comfort database [1], underpinning the North American naturally ventilated adaptive co...
Moving air has long been used to provide comfort in warm environments. Provision for indoor air move...
Much has been done in order to understand when air movement enhancement is unwelcome. Traditionally,...
Much has been done in order to understand when air movement enhancement is unwelcome. Traditionally,...
The influence of thermal parameters (air velocity, air velocity fluctuations, and air temperature) o...
This paper compares occupants’ thermal response to naturally-ventilated and air-conditioned offices ...
This paper compares occupants’ thermal response to naturally-ventilated and air-conditioned offices ...
This study presents the findings of the significance between thermal comfort and air movement percep...
This study explores the interaction between perceived and calculated thermal comfort in Iranian offi...
Air temperature thresholds are investigated and proposed for acceptable comfort in air-conditioned b...
This study explores the interaction between perceived and calculated thermal comfort in Iranian offi...
Often, building assessments do not account for users' social concerns in relation to buildings' phys...