Chattanooga Times Free Press

It’s not just you: The reason why a 50-degree day in fall feels so cold

- BY NIRAJ CHOKSHI

That first cold spell of the season always feels especially harsh.

If you’ve ever wondered, from beneath several layers of clothing, whether you were overreacti­ng to those frigid early fall days, take solace. It may not just be in your head: The human body takes time to acclimate to the cold.

“We kind of get a global response over time over the winter so that a 50-degree day in, say, February, feels glorious, whereas at this time of year it feels chilly,” said John Castellani, a physiologi­st who specialize­s in cold weather research at the U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmen­tal Medicine in Massachuse­tts.

Some experts argue that the shift in perception is mostly psychologi­cal, but others, including Castellani, say there’s more to it: The evidence suggests the body grows to tolerate the cold over time.

Here’s a brief look at what we do and don’t know about how the body responds to the cold in, say, autumn, compared to the spring.

WE’RE ALL SNOWFLAKES

As anyone who has fought over the thermostat knows, people experience temperatur­e differentl­y, sometimes dramatical­ly so.

A variety of factors explain why. Studies have found, for example, that larger people shed more body heat in the cold than smaller ones because they have a greater surface area over which to lose it. People with more fat beneath their skin lose less heat because it serves as insulation. And older people can have more difficulty with frigidity than the young.

Psychology can play a substantia­l role, too. As can behavior: Humans excel at limiting their exposure to wintry conditions, which can dull the effects of the cold.

“There’s a classic saying that ‘man in the cold is not necessaril­y a cold man,’” said Mike Tipton, a professor of physiology at the University of Portsmouth in Britain who studies temperatur­e regulation in the body. “We wrap up, we heat our houses, we wear clothes and we re-create our tropical origins next to the skin.”

HOW THE BODY RESPONDS

When the temperatur­e drops, sensors in the skin known as thermorece­ptors detect that change and send signals to the hypothalam­us, a small, versatile region of the brain sometimes referred to as the body’s thermostat.

To maintain a safe core body temperatur­e, the hypothalam­us may then direct the body to do one of two things. The main response is a process known as vasoconstr­iction: the tightening of blood vessels on the body’s periphery to shunt warm blood away from the extremitie­s and skin and back toward the core. The body may also shiver to generate heat.

“When the skin senses cold temperatur­es, its first response really is to protect the inside,” Castellani said.

HOW THE BODY ADJUSTS

Over time, though, those responses can change.

Studies of people throughout the world have found that those frequently exposed to the cold simply begin to tolerate it more by shivering or constricti­ng blood vessels less.

Indigenous population­s in the Australian and African deserts and the Arctic, for example, have been found to have a less pronounced response to the cold than those not subjected to the same frigid conditions. (Temperatur­es in deserts often plummet at night.)

The same has been found even among people subjected to the cold in more limited ways. For example, fishermen and fish filleters who work long hours with their hands in cold water have been found to have higher hand temperatur­es when their hands are placed in frigid water compared with control subjects. Similar effects have been found among slaughterh­ouse workers who routinely handle slabs of cold meat.

That, Castellani said, explains how a person in a cool climate might adapt to winter over time.

“We experience that cold air on our cheek all winter long, and basically that skin doesn’t constrict as much,” he said. “We’ve habituated in that area, and because the skin’s a little warmer that’s why it feels warmer. That’s why the cold October day feels much colder than that same day in February.”

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND ?? Ron Gray walks along Market Street on a chilly January morning.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY DOUG STRICKLAND Ron Gray walks along Market Street on a chilly January morning.
 ?? SOURCE: WRCB-TV CHANNEL 3 ??
SOURCE: WRCB-TV CHANNEL 3

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