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Journal Article

Citation

Griffin MJ, Brett MW. Aviat. Space Environ. Med. 1997; 68(12): 1115-1122.

Affiliation

Human Factors Research Unit, University of Southampton, U.K.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1997, Aerospace Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9408562

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The performance of tasks in which the head must be positioned close to objects in a moving vehicle may be impeded by the presence of vibration. HYPOTHESES: It was hypothesized that the extent to which a head positioning task would be impeded by whole-body vibration would depend on the frequency, direction and waveform of the vibration and the posture of the body. METHOD: There were 12 subjects who participated in a laboratory experiment in which they judged the difficulty of looking through a pair of sights while exposed to low frequency vibration. We investigated 4 variables: vibration axis (fore-and-aft, lateral, vertical), vibration frequency (11 frequencies in the range 0.5 to 5.0 Hz), vibration waveform (sinusoidal vibration, one-third octave bands of random vibration), seating condition (wearing a 4-point harness, sitting without back support). RESULTS: We found that all variables affected the perceived task difficulty. Frequencies of horizontal vibration in the range 1 to 4 Hz caused most difficulty. Task difficulty was greatest with random vibration, especially with low frequency vibration in the horizontal axes. The wearing of a 4-point harness greatly reduced the perceived task difficulty during exposure to low frequency fore-and-aft vibration but increased task difficulty with higher frequencies of lateral vibration. CONCLUSIONS: Increased motion predictability and the provision of suitable support to the upper body (e.g., a harness, back support, front support) can reduce the difficulty of head positioning tasks during exposure to some types of oscillatory motion.


Language: en

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