The Effects of Extra Vehicular Activity (EVA) Gloves on Dexterity and Tactility

Author:

Bishu Ram R.1,Klute Glenn2,Kim Byungjoon1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Industrial Engineering University of Nebraska, Lincoln

2. Anthropometry and Biomechanics Laboratory NASA, Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas

Abstract

Human capabilities such as dexterity, manipulability, and tactile perception are unique and render the hand as a very versatile, effective and a multipurpose tool. This is especially true for unknown microgravity environments such as the EVA environment. Facilitation of these activities, with simultaneous protection from the cruel EVA environment are the two, often conflicting, objectives of glove design. The objective of this study was to assess the effects of EVA gloves at different pressures on human hand capabilities, A factorial experiment was performed in which three types of EVA gloves were tested at five pressure differentials. The independent variables tested in this experiment were gender, glove type, pressure differential, and glove make. Six subjects participated in an experiment where a number of dexterity measures, namely time to tie a rope, and the time to assemble a nut and bolt were recorded. Tactility was measured through a two point discrimination test. The results indicate that a) With EVA gloves there is a considerable reduction in dexterity, b) performance decrements increase with increasing pressure differential, and c) some interesting gender glove interactions were observed, some of which may have been due to the extent (or lack of) fit of the glove to the hand. The implications for the designer are discussed.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine,General Chemistry

Reference4 articles.

1. Bishu R. R., Klute G., Kim B. (1993) Investigation of the effects of extra vehicular activity (EVA) gloves on performance, in the Advances in Industrial Ergonomics and Safety V (Editors: Nielson, Jorgensen), Taylor and Francis, London, pp 683–690.

2. Effect of Gloves on Control Operation Time

3. Glove Characteristics Influencing Control Manipulability

4. Prehension force as a measure of psychomotor skill for bare and gloved hands.

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