Alcohol and Disorientation-Related Responses. IV. Effects of Different Alcohol Dosages and Display Illumination on Tracking Performance During Vestibular Stimulation


Book Description

A previous CAMI laboratory investigation showed that alcohol impairs the ability of men to suppress vestibular nystagmus while visually fixating on a cockpit instrument, thus degrading visual tracking performance (eye-hand coordination) during angular acceleration. Reduced display illumination, independently, has also been shown to degrade tracking performance during vestibular stimulation. The present study investigated the way in which low and moderate dosages of alcohol and two levels of instrument-display illumination combined to affect tracking performance (a) in a static (no motion) environment, and (b) in a dynamic (whole-body motion) environment. Mean blood alcohol levels as low as .027 per cent significantly decreased (P










National Library of Medicine Current Catalog


Book Description

First multi-year cumulation covers six years: 1965-70.