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Journal Article

Citation

Kobrick JL, Sleeper LA. Aviat. Space Environ. Med. 1986; 57(2): 144-148.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1986, Aerospace Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

3954702

Abstract

Sensitivity for detecting visual signals distributed at various locations throughout the visual field was studied in 16 male subjects who were all exposed to two degrees of ambient heat (91 degrees F/61% RH; 55 degrees F/35% RH) while wearing the Army chemical protective clothing system; also to 70 degrees F/35% RH while wearing Army battle-dress uniform (fatigues). Response time for signal detection increased systematically and significantly with peripheralization of stimulus locations. It was most impaired in the superior and inferior visual field areas and least affected along the horizontal axis area. The data support previous results obtained using this task. Both the MOPP and the heat + MOPP exposure conditions produced highly significant systematic increases in response time to all signals; the worst performance occurred under the heat + MOPP combination. Implications for visual performance while wearing chemical protective gear are discussed.


Language: en

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