Abstract
BackgroundThis study evaluated cognitive workload in soldiers undertaking a long duration march wearing different loads.MethodsMilitary participants (n=12 men and n=10 women) performed four 3-hour loaded marches (12.25 km at 4.9 km/hour) wearing either 21 kg, 26 kg, 33 kg or 43 kg. During the march, accuracy and response time were measured using the verbal working memory n-back test (0, 1, 2 and 3) and two bespoke Go/No Go tests (visual/auditory) to assess inhibition of a pre-potent response.ResultsThe physical demands of the march increased with load and march duration but remained at moderate intensity. N-back test accuracy ranged from 74% to 98% in men and 62% to 98% in women. Reduced accuracy was observed as load and time increased. Accuracy during the visual Go/No Go test also reduced with load, accuracy ranged from 69% to 89% in men and 65% to 90% in women. No differences due to load or time were observed during completion of the auditory Go/No Go task; accuracy ranged from 93% to 97% in men and 77% to 95% in women. A number of participants were unable to complete the march due to discomfort. Reports of discomfort were more frequent in women, which may have contributed to the greater reductions in accuracy observed.ConclusionThese data provide further evidence that cognitive performance of military personnel can be affected during long duration loaded marching. Women reported discomfort from equipment more frequently than men, which may make them more susceptible to declines in cognitive performance. These findings highlight important considerations for equipment procurement.
Reference30 articles.
1. Lloyd-Williams RC , Fordy G . The consequences of burden on the Dismounted soldier. (DSTL/CR68536/V1.0). Cited with permission from Dstl, 2013.
2. Soldier Load Carriage: Historical, Physiological, Biomechanical, and Medical Aspects
3. Determinants of load carrying ability
4. Predicting physiological capacity of human load carriage - a review;Drain;Appl Ergon,2016
5. Bossi LLM , Tack DW , Karakolis T . Rationalizing the approach to mitigate soldier physical burden: are Ironman or Captain America our Magic Bullet? In: Belanger SAH , Breede HC , von Hlatky S , eds. Transhumanising war: performance implications for policy, society, and the soldier. Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2020.
Cited by
16 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献