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Effects of contact with wood on blood pressure and subjective evaluation
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  • Original Article
  • Published: 01 April 2008

Effects of contact with wood on blood pressure and subjective evaluation

  • Satoshi Sakuragawa1,
  • Tomoyuki Kaneko1 &
  • Yoshifumi Miyazaki1 

Journal of Wood Science volume 54, pages 107–113 (2008)Cite this article

  • 1206 Accesses

  • 35 Citations

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Abstract

This study examined the effects of contact with wood on the living human body using a physiological index and subjective evaluation. Consecutive blood pressure measurements were used as the physiological index, and sensory evaluation using the semantic differential (SD) method was used for subjective evaluation. Consideration was also given to cases in which materials were cooled and heated as well as kept at room temperature, to eliminate the effects of heat flux due to differences in thermal conductivity between wood and other materials. It was found that contact with wood produced coarse/natural sensations, with no associated increase in systolic blood pressure. Contact with cold wood created subjectively dangerous/uncomfortable but still coarse/natural sensations, also with no associated increase in blood pressure; therefore, there was no correspondence between subjective evaluation and physiological responses. Contact with aluminum kept at room temperature and cold acrylic plastic created flat/artificial and dangerous/uncomfortable sensations, with an associated significant increase in blood pressure; thus, there was a close correlation between subjective evaluation and physiological responses. It was therefore concluded that contact with wood, unlike artificial materials such as aluminum, induces no physiological stress even when kept at room temperature or cooled.

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Author information

Authors and Affiliations

  1. Shizuoka Industrial Research Institute of Shizuoka Prefecture, 2078 Makigaya, Aoi-ku, Shizuoka, 421-1298, Japan

    Satoshi Sakuragawa, Tomoyuki Kaneko & Yoshifumi Miyazaki

Authors
  1. Satoshi Sakuragawa
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  2. Tomoyuki Kaneko
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  3. Yoshifumi Miyazaki
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Corresponding author

Correspondence to Satoshi Sakuragawa.

Additional information

Part of this report was presented at the 48th Annual Meeting of the Japan Wood Research Society in Shizuoka, April 1998

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Cite this article

Sakuragawa, S., Kaneko, T. & Miyazaki, Y. Effects of contact with wood on blood pressure and subjective evaluation. J Wood Sci 54, 107–113 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10086-007-0915-7

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  • Received: 09 February 2007

  • Accepted: 09 August 2007

  • Published: 01 April 2008

  • Issue Date: April 2008

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10086-007-0915-7

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Key words

  • Wood
  • Contact
  • Blood pressure
  • SD method
  • Temperature
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