• Title/Summary/Keyword: 예상평균불만족률

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Evaluation of Comfort Performance for Modernized Hanok: Targeting Hanok Residence at the Jamjeong-Haetsal Village in Hwasun, Jeonnam Province (신한옥의 쾌적성능 평가: 전남 화순 잠정햇살마을 한옥단지를 대상으로)

  • Choe, Seung-Ju;Lee, Mihyang;Kim, Jae-Hyang;Han, Seung-Hoon
    • Land and Housing Review
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.99-108
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    • 2021
  • With increasing interest in living in hanoks, there's a growing need for more quantitative data on the thermal comfort performance of modern hanoks. With that in mind, this research project studied a modern hanok located in Jamjeong-Haetsal Village in Hwasun, Jeollanam Province as a case study to evaluate the Predicted Mean Vote (PMV) of modernized hanoks. Based on environmental data collected at the hanok and computer simulation both Life-Cycle PMV (L.C.PMV) and Normal PMV (N.PMV) were calculated for the hanok. Study results showed that during the summer and winter seasons the PMV and heat index at major heat and major cold weather points significantly deviated from the comfort zone. The rate of change in PMV was also greater in the winter than in the summer. The study found that the modern hanok lacks proper thermal insulation for maintaining thermal comfort.

Thermal Comfort and the Physiological and Psychological Effects of Spending Time in Broad-Leaved Forests in Summers (여름철 활엽수림에서의 휴식이 온열환경 쾌적성 및 인체의 생리ᐧ심리적 반응에 미치는 영향)

  • Juhyeon Kim;Injoon Song;Choyun Kim;Dawou Joung;Yunjeong Yi;Bum-Jin Park;Chorong Song
    • Journal of Korean Society of Forest Science
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    • v.112 no.4
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    • pp.544-553
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    • 2023
  • The purpose of this study was to reveal the thermal comfort and physiological and psychological effects of spending time in broad-leaved forests in suumer. Thirty-one university students (with an average age of 21.4 ± 2.1 years) participated in the study, and a within-subjects experimental design methodology was used. The participants moved to an experimental site (with a crown closure of 76.6%) or a control site (25.9%), sat on a chair to eliminate the impact of movement, and rested for 5 minutes with closed eyes. At this time, thermal comfort, heart rate variability, heart rate, and forehead temperature were continuously measured. After that, blood pressure and pulse rate were measured, and a subjective evaluation was conducted. As a result, spending time at an experimental site showed a statistically significant decrease in the predicted mean vote and the percentage of dissatisfied values, enhancement of parasympathetic nerve activity, decrease of forehead temperature, diastolic blood pressure, heart rate, pulse rate, and improvement of personal thermal sensation (thermal sensation vote and comfort sensation vote). In conclusion, it was found that a forest with high crown closure reduces thermal stress and induces physiological and psychological relaxation.

Temporal Changes in the Physiological and Psychological Relaxation Effects of a Forest Environment during the Summer (시간 변화에 따른 여름철 산림환경의 생리ᐧ심리적 안정 효과)

  • Injoon Song;Juhyeon Kim;Choyun Kim;Dawou Joung;Yunjeong Yi;Bum-Jin Park;Chorong Song
    • Journal of Korean Society of Forest Science
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    • v.113 no.1
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    • pp.107-117
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    • 2024
  • This study investigated temporal changes in forest physical variables and their effects on thermal comfort and physiological and psychological responses. Environmental factors (air temperature, mean radiant temperature, wind speed, and relative humidity), the predicted mean vote (PMV), and the predicted percentage of dissatisfied (PPD) visitors were continuously measured between 9:00 AM and 6:00 PM. We assessed the physiological and psychological responses (heart rate variability, heart rate, oral temperature, blood pressure, pulse rate, thermal sensation vote, comfort sensation vote, and subjective feelings) of 30 male university students (average age: 21.7±1.9 years), who closed their eyes and relaxed for 5 minutes every hour. Examination of correlations between environmental factors and physiological responses showed that ① the mean radiant temperature, wind speed, and relative humidity significantly changed with time; ② PMV and PPD also showed significant changes over time, and the thermal sensation vote corresponded with PMV; however, the comfort sensation vote did not correspond with PPD; ③ Among the physiological responses, parasympathetic nerve activity, sympathetic nerve activity, heart rate, and diastolic blood pressure significantly varied with time, with parasympathetic nerve activity having the lowest value and sympathetic nerve activity the highest at the highest air temperature (2:00-4:00 PM); and ④ Air temperature, mean radiant temperature, and wind speed showed a negative correlation with parasympathetic nerve activity and a positive correlation with sympathetic nerve activity. These findings indicate that the relaxation effects of the forest environment depend on what time of day people are exposed to it, and the changes occurring in forest environmental factors over time modulate these effects.