Emerging effects of temperature on human cognition, affect, and behaviour
3206 Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology
Affect
Behavior
10122 Institute of Geography
Cognition
Mental Disorders
Temperature
2800 General Neuroscience
Climate; Cold; Heat; Mental; Psychological; Temperature; Weather
Humans
910 Geography & travel
Body Temperature Regulation
Body Temperature
DOI:
10.1016/j.biopsycho.2024.108791
Publication Date:
2024-04-08T05:49:25Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
Human body core temperature is tightly regulated within approximately 37 °C. Global near surface temperature has increased by over 1.2 °C between 1850 and 2020. In light of the challenge this poses to human thermoregulation, the present perspective article sought to provide an overview on the effects of varying ambient and body temperature on cognitive, affective, and behavioural domains of functioning. To this end, an overview of observational and experimental studies in healthy individuals and individuals with mental disorders was provided. Within body core temperature at approximately 37 °C, relatively lower ambient and skin temperatures appear to evoke a need for social connection, whereas comparably higher temperatures appear to facilitate notions of other as closer and more sociable. Above-average ambient temperatures are associated with increased conflicts as well as incident psychotic and depressive symptoms, mental disorders, and suicide. With mild hypo- and hyperthermia, paradoxical effects are observed: whereas the acute states are generally characterised by impairments in cognitive performance, anxiety, and irritability, individuals with depression experience longer-term symptom improvements with treatments deliberately inducing these states for brief amounts of time. When taken together, it has thus become clear that temperature is inexorably associated with human cognition, affect, and (potentially) behaviour. Given the projected increase in global warming, further research into the affective and behavioural sequelae of heat and the mechanisms translating it into mental health outcomes is urgently warranted.
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