Heart rate (effects are due to baroreflex)
Heating (that causes hyperthermia)
:
increases
Cold hydrotherapy (without hypothermia)
:
reduces
Metabolic rate
Heating (that causes hyperthermia)
:
increases
Cold hydrotherapy (without hypothermia)
:
increases
Appetite
Heating (that causes hyperthermia)
:
reduces
Cold hydrotherapy (without hypothermia)
:
improves or no effect (continuous exposure to cold increases food intake, but causes a weight loss)
Sweating
Heating (that causes hyperthermia)
:
promotes
Cold hydrotherapy (without hypothermia)
:
reduces
On free will.
Free will is closely linked with the concept of determinism in that determinists believe that the future is predetermined and authentic free will does not exist. In their view, what most people consider to be free will is merely an illusion. Determinism is most likely incorrect because at the quantum mechanical level (the world of electrons, atoms, and molecules, i.e. the microworld) the events are unpredictable and uncertain as postulated in the Uncertainty Principle. The latest developments in quantum physics suggest that, in the world of elementary particles, identical sets of circumstances can produce different outcomes (it all depends on probabilities of various outcomes). Therefore, the future most likely is not predetermined in the microworld. The
macro
world, i.e. the world of people, consumer goods, and houses, is the extension of the
micro
world. Therefore, in the macroworld (our world) the future is not predetermined either. Some things are more predictable than others; for example, changes of day and night are predictable (you can predict them with high probability). Other things, such as weather, are less predictable.
Nonetheless, although it is difficult to predict what will happen in the life of any given person, it is easy to predict what will
not
happen, with high probability. With respect to financial future of a person, it is easy to predict that a person with average net worth and income will not get into the top 0.1% of wealth in the population. The probability that this prediction will hold true is roughly 99.9%.
Returning to the subject of free will, human free will is limited because thoughts, desires, needs, emotions, and personality traits are the products of activity of the brain, and unfortunately, the vast majority of people has no control over their brains and cannot select their brains from a catalog before they are born. A person is stuck with the brain she was born with for life. (See
endnote Z
regarding the hegemony of the brain over the mind.) The government strictly regulates the substances that can allow a person to control some brain functions: depressants, strong stimulants, euphoriants, opioid painkillers, hallucinogens, and others. The law forbids healthy people from using these substances, with rare exceptions. Science has yet to explain the vast majority of brain functions, and it is unclear how a person can change these functions. Some of the examples are character traits and criminal behavior. Existing cognitive enhancement techniques (such as
Ritalin
®) can improve some mental functions but these techniques have their limitations. It is likely that individual differences in behavior and intelligence will continue to be substantial, even if proven methods of cognitive enhancement become widely available.
The arguments presented above suggest that most people have little free will and little control over their actions. This, however, does not mean that the criminal justice system should be abolished. Without going into a long discussion about ethics and moral responsibility, it makes sense for society to isolate dangerous people, regardless of whether they intentionally chose to be evil or are merely victims of their abnormal brain.
Mechanisms underlying the anti-fatigue effect of cooling
(L
AY
L
ANGUAGE
S
UMMARY
): We reviewed existing evidence of this effect in the
main text
. Possible mechanisms of the reduction of fatigue by body cooling can be the following: i) a reduction of the total level of serotonin in the brain, which is in agreement with a widely known theory of fatigue; ii) activation of the brain region responsible for wakefulness (the reticular activating system); iii) stimulation of the thyroid gland and the resulting enhancement of metabolism; and iv) increased dopamine activity in some areas of the brain.
Readers can find a more detailed discussion of this topic elsewhere [
671
].
Existing evidence of antidepressant effects of brief moderate cooling
(L
AY
L
ANGUAGE
S
UMMARY
): Moderate cooling of the body affects the activity of dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin in the brain, which is similar to the effects of some antidepressant drugs. There is also a resemblance with electroshock therapy, which is highly effective in depression.
In the main text we discussed several studies showing that cooling of the body has antidepressant properties [
376
,
385
,
387
]. There may be several mechanisms of the antidepressant effect of body cooling. Brief cooling of the body may produce physiological effects that are similar to the effects of some antidepressant drugs. In particular, animal studies suggest that exposure to cold can affect dopaminergic [
472
], noradrenergic [
659
,
686
,
687
], and serotonergic [
659
,
681
-
683
] pathways in the brain. These monoaminergic systems are targeted by various classes of antidepressant drugs, such as tricyclic antidepressants (mostly affect noradrenergic and serotonergic pathways [
712
]), monoamine oxidase inhibitors (target all three monoamine systems [
713
]), selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), dopamine-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors and serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors.