Assessment of macroclimate and microclimate effects on outdoor thermal comfort via artificial neural network models
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Embargoed until: 2024-03-03
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Author(s)
Zhang, Jian
Zhang, Fan
Gou, Zhonghua
Liu, Jianlin
Year published
2022
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Show full item recordAbstract
Outdoor thermal comfort is significantly affected by climate, including macroclimate, local climate, and microclimate. However, the combined impacts of macroclimate and microclimate factors are less understood in previous thermal comfort studies. This paper employed 43 previously published studies to comprehensively explore the impacts of macro- and micro- climatic factors on the outdoor thermal comfort. The relative importance of these influencing factors was assessed via five verified artificial neural network (ANN) models. For studies employing subjective thermal indices which collected participants' thermal perceptions, ...
View more >Outdoor thermal comfort is significantly affected by climate, including macroclimate, local climate, and microclimate. However, the combined impacts of macroclimate and microclimate factors are less understood in previous thermal comfort studies. This paper employed 43 previously published studies to comprehensively explore the impacts of macro- and micro- climatic factors on the outdoor thermal comfort. The relative importance of these influencing factors was assessed via five verified artificial neural network (ANN) models. For studies employing subjective thermal indices which collected participants' thermal perceptions, the neutral temperature expressed by physiologically equivalent temperature (PET) was found to be significantly correlated with macroclimate factors, especially the latitude and season. In studies employing only objective thermal indices, it was found that macroclimate factors, such as the latitude, distance from the sea, and altitude, have similar contribution to the outdoor thermal comfort as microclimate factors, such as height to width ratio (H/W) and sky view factor. Results resonated with previous findings that outdoor comfort can be improved by changing urban geometry, vegetation, surfaces, and waterbodies. Future design and planning works should consider both macroclimate and microclimate factors and carefully design urban geometry and morphology to improve outdoor thermal comfort for regions with disadvantageous macroclimates.
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View more >Outdoor thermal comfort is significantly affected by climate, including macroclimate, local climate, and microclimate. However, the combined impacts of macroclimate and microclimate factors are less understood in previous thermal comfort studies. This paper employed 43 previously published studies to comprehensively explore the impacts of macro- and micro- climatic factors on the outdoor thermal comfort. The relative importance of these influencing factors was assessed via five verified artificial neural network (ANN) models. For studies employing subjective thermal indices which collected participants' thermal perceptions, the neutral temperature expressed by physiologically equivalent temperature (PET) was found to be significantly correlated with macroclimate factors, especially the latitude and season. In studies employing only objective thermal indices, it was found that macroclimate factors, such as the latitude, distance from the sea, and altitude, have similar contribution to the outdoor thermal comfort as microclimate factors, such as height to width ratio (H/W) and sky view factor. Results resonated with previous findings that outdoor comfort can be improved by changing urban geometry, vegetation, surfaces, and waterbodies. Future design and planning works should consider both macroclimate and microclimate factors and carefully design urban geometry and morphology to improve outdoor thermal comfort for regions with disadvantageous macroclimates.
View less >
Journal Title
Urban Climate
Volume
42
Copyright Statement
© 2022 Elsevier. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, providing that the work is properly cited.
Subject
Land use and environmental planning
Environmental sciences