2019-08-15T14:39:16 n7213

A comparison between conductive and infrared devices for measuring mean skin temperature at rest, during exercise in the heat, and recovery

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Skin temperature assessment has historically been undertaken with conductive devices affixed to the skin. With the development of technology, infrared devices are increasingly utilised in the measurement of skin temperature. Therefore, the purpose of this research was to evaluate the agreement between four skin temperature devices at rest, during exercise in the heat, and recovery. Mean skin temperature was assessed in thirty healthy males during 30 minutes of rest (24.0 ± 1.2 °C, 56 ± 8%), 30 minutes of cycle in the heat (38.0 ± 0.5 °C, 41 ± 2%), and 45 minutes of recovery (24.0 ± 1.3 °C, 56 ± 9%). The data consists of tables showing results of temperature assessed at four sites using two conductive devices (thermistors, iButtons®) and two infrared devices (infrared thermometer, infrared camera).

Geographical area of data collection

kmlPolyCoords
153.552920,-26.777500 152.452799,-26.777500 152.452799,-28.037280 153.552920,-28.037280 153.552920,-26.777500

Research areas

Exercise science
Thermoregulation
Exercise Physiology
Thermography
Conductive devices
Environmental stress
Infrared devices
Thermometry

Cite this collection

Bach, Aaron (2014): A comparison between conductive and infrared devices for measuring mean skin temperature at rest, during exercise in the heat, and recovery. figshare.
Bach,Aaron. (2016): A comparison between conductive and infrared devices for measuring mean skin temperature at rest, during exercise in the heat, and recovery. [Queensland University of Technology]. https://doi.org/10.4225/09/58534c9127b2c

Data file types

.xlsx

Licence


Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC-BY)
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Copyright

©

Dates of data collection

From 2013-09-01 to 2013-10-31

Connections

Has association with
Has chief investigator
Aaron Bach  (Researcher)
Was collected by
Aaron Bach  (Researcher)

Other

Date record created:
2015-01-14T08:29:55
Date record modified:
2019-08-15T14:39:16
Record status:
Published - Open Access