Health06:53 · 3h ago

Scientific Study Explains Why Men Feel Hotter Than Women at Same Temperature

Now 14Right
Translated & summarized from Now 14 by baba
The story · English

A common domestic debate over air conditioning temperatures is rooted in physiological differences between men and women, not just habits or preferences. Research from Finland's VTT Technical Research Centre highlights that men and women perceive the same ambient temperature differently due to variations in body composition, particularly muscle mass. Men generally have higher muscle mass, which is metabolically active and generates more internal heat even at rest, making them feel warmer.

Additionally, metabolic rate differences contribute to this phenomenon. A scientific review published in Frontiers in Endocrinology shows women have a lower basal metabolic rate than men, producing less internal heat when at rest. This, combined with muscle mass differences, explains why identical temperatures can feel comfortable to men but cold to women.

Temperature sensitivity thresholds also vary: women’s internal mechanisms to conserve heat activate below 31 degrees Celsius, whereas men’s activate below approximately 28.5 degrees. Hormonal influences, especially progesterone, further affect women's thermal perception, causing fluctuations in heat and cold sensitivity throughout their menstrual cycle.

This biological basis clarifies why men often feel hot and women feel cold in the same environment, resolving the perennial argument over thermostat settings. The article emphasizes that these differences are scientifically grounded rather than subjective complaints.

Read the original at Now 14
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