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Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
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Is Dual-Task Performance Necessarily Impaired in Space?

Barry Fowler

York University, North York, Ontario, Canada

Otmar Bock

German Sports University, Cologne, Germany

Deanna Comfort

York University, North York, Ontario, Canada

Recent single-subject experiments in space have reported impaired dual-task performance that could result from either a direct effect of microgravity on the central nervous system or from the multistressor environment. We sought to distinguish between these hypotheses using 6 astronauts in the 16-day NASA Neurolab mission, testing them at intervals with a dual task consisting of primary pursuit tracking without vision of the hand and secondary reaction time (RT). The participants were highly trained, instructed to maintain a fixed attention strategy, and restrained in the apparatus. The results showed that absolute and variable tracking error, as well as correct RT and the standard deviation of RT, were unimpaired. However, RT errors became more variable, an effect attributed to a decrease in strategic control. We conclude that the impairments observed in previous dual-task space experiments can be attributed to stressors rather than to microgravity and that performance deficits are probably not a necessary concomitant of space flight if attention is paid to task design and astronaut training.

Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, Vol. 42, No. 2, 318-326 (2000)
DOI: 10.1518/001872000779656507


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B. Fowler, S. Meehan, and A. Singhal
Perceptual-motor performance and associated kinematics in space.
Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, December 1, 2008; 50(6): 879 - 892.
[Abstract] [PDF]