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Journal Article

Citation

Palmer CJ, Bigelow C, Van Emmerik REA. Ergonomics 2013; 56(11): 1708-1721.

Affiliation

a Sensory-Motor Control Lab, Kinesiology Department , University of Massachusetts , Totman Gymnasium, 25 Eastman Lane , Amherst , MA , 01003 , USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/00140139.2013.832805

PMID

24028557

Abstract

Soldier equipment compromises task performance as temporal constraints during critical situations and load increase inertial and interactive forces during movement. Methods are necessary to optimise equipment that relate task performance to underlying coordination and perception-action coupling. Employing ecological task analysis and methods from dynamical systems theory, equipment load and coordination was examined during two sub-tasks embedded in combat performance, threat discrimination and dynamic marksmanship. Perception-action coupling was degraded with load during threat discrimination, leading to delays in functional reaction time. Reduced speed and accuracy during dynamic marksmanship under load was related to disrupted segmental coordination and adaptability during postural transitions between targets. These results show how reduced performance under load relates to coordination changes and perception-action coupling. These changes in functional capability are directly related to soldier survivability in combat. The methods employed may aid equipment design towards more optimised performance by modifying equipment or its distribution on humans. Practitioner Summary: The combat equipment necessary for soldier survival and mission accomplishment significantly impedes task performance. Understanding relations among equipment, task performance, situational awareness and segmental coordination is necessary to define the trade space for design optimisation. This article begins to define this trade space in terms of perception-action coupling and survivability in combat.


Language: en

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