Detection-threshold of 50-Hz electric fields by human subjects
โ Scribed by Prof. M. Kato; S. Ohta; K. Shimizu; Y. Tsuchida; G. Matsumoto
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 511 KB
- Volume
- 10
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0197-8462
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The threshold intensity for detection of an AC electric field was studied in human subjects at several different temperatures and humidities. The dorsum and palm of the hand were exposed to fields, representing hairy and hairless skin, in order to clarify whether hair movement is critical for field detection. Experiments were carried out on human subjects (seven men and four women) during hot humid weather of July-August and dry cool air of October-November. Threshold values obtained in the summer were 30-65 kVlm for the hairy skin on the dorsum of the hand, while for the hairless skin on the palm the threshold was > 115 kV/m (highest field available due to limitations of the power supply). During the fall, the threshold was much higher than during the summer. We sought possible reasons for the difference and found that humidity was the main factor. Relative permittivity of woman's hair was then estimated by measuring capacitance of the hairs under dry (35% RH) and wet (85% RH) conditions at 20 "C. The values of relative permittivity obtained under these two conditions differed by several times the average. The differences in detection thresholds may be attributable to the different relative permittivities of the hairs under dry and wet conditions.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
This investigation studied the effects of 50 H a electric and magnetic fields on the pulse rate of the human heart. The ECG (electrocardiograms) of 41 male volunteers were recorded with a Holter recorder. Twenty-six subjects were measured in and outside real fields, and 15 subjects were measured in
A miniaturized probe was designed and built to provide detailed data on fields induced by a uniform 60-Hz magnetic field in homogeneous models of rat and human. The probe employed three silver wires twisted and potted in an 8-cm hypodermic needle. The exposed tips of the wires formed three sensing e