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Original Articles

Degradation of force-loaded pursuit tracking performance in a dual-task paradigmFootnote

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Pages 639-647 | Received 13 Aug 1984, Accepted 27 Jun 1985, Published online: 07 Jun 2007
 

Abstract

Fifty-four subjects performed pursuit tracking on a specially modified pursuit rotor. Each subject tracked for 2 min at each of three levels of force, both with and without a simultaneous auditory attention task. The presence of the auditory task resulted in a significant degradation of tracking performance. This degradation was most severe for the females in the sample. Performance degradation was also related to the position along the tracking path in which the tracking occurred. Performance on the auditory task was significantly affected both by the difficulty level of the task, and by the amount of force exertion required on the pursuit rotor. Results are discussed in terms of task compatibility and cockpit design.

Notes

† The views, opinions, and/or findings contained in this report are those of the authors and should not be construed as an official Department of the Army position, policy, or decision, unless so designated by other official documentation (TWX, DA, DACS-DMO, 1978).

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