Postures for Precision: An Ecological Approach to Marksmanship and the Issue of Warfighter Load.

The goal of this dissertation was to understand the issue of load in a more operationally realistic way, while examining underlying segmental relations and postural regulation related to functional capability. The ecological approach provides a foundation for this work, as its approach seeks underst...

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Main Author: Palmer, Christopher Jay
Format: Others
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/open_access_dissertations/618
https://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1619&context=open_access_dissertations
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spelling ndltd-UMASS-oai-scholarworks.umass.edu-open_access_dissertations-16192020-12-02T14:39:02Z Postures for Precision: An Ecological Approach to Marksmanship and the Issue of Warfighter Load. Palmer, Christopher Jay The goal of this dissertation was to understand the issue of load in a more operationally realistic way, while examining underlying segmental relations and postural regulation related to functional capability. The ecological approach provides a foundation for this work, as its approach seeks understanding across nested relations and at the level of the Organism-Environment system. First, a landing task was used to examine transitions from movement to upright stance, evaluating the effects of load on changes relevant to prospective control of action. Greater negative head angles, reductions in the field of regard, and reduced variability in orienting coordination (trunk-head relations) under load all suggest reductions in the postural affordances for visual perception. The heaviest load was not the worst; as the asymmetrically loaded Vest configuration had greater negative effects on postural affordances. This was further supported by the increased power and frequency content in the Center of Pressure dynamics, suggesting much more difficult postural regulation in this configuration. The second study examined the effects of load on dynamic marksmanship performance using large loads on the torso and small loads on the extremities (night vision goggles and extremity armor on the arms) while establishing two different postures determined by target placement. Load and Posture both had negative impacts on the speed-accuracy trade-off, with larger loads affecting gross postural transitions and smaller loads degrading fine-aiming performance. The more challenging posture degraded accuracy on target substantially, suggesting that reorientation of multiple segments may be necessary for assessing the consequences of load on marksmanship performance. Increases in the total coordinative variability of Head-Trunk-Gun relations with load at a high target suggests that increased inertial and interactive forces during movement "push" the system out of the optimal segmental relations. Moreover, the results from Postural-Focal coupling suggest that load "freezes" previously available degrees of freedom, making the system more deterministic and less flexible in goal-directed achievement. The two previous paradigms are joined in the third study to understand perception-action coupling during movement cessation to marksmanship transitions, a ubiquitous task in combat. Increased time to discriminate targets was found with load and was related to peak head velocities and the inability to dissipate energy at the head/eyes under load. Again, Load and Posture had significant effects on the speed-accuracy trade-off, especially at the load most similar to that seen in current missions. Segmental coordination in this effort ballasts the findings in study 2, as significant shifts from optimal Head-Trunk-Gun relations were observed with load as well as increased variability that was detrimental to task performance. This dissertation demonstrates that science can be "Operationalized" in a way that maintains scientific integrity during complex task analysis; providing additional insight into the issue of load across multiple scales of analysis related to functional capability and survivability in combat and others encumbered by load. 2012-09-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarworks.umass.edu/open_access_dissertations/618 https://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1619&context=open_access_dissertations Open Access Dissertations ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Action-Perception Coupling Segmental Coordination Survivability Task Performance Underlying Dynamics Kinesiology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Action-Perception Coupling
Segmental Coordination
Survivability
Task Performance
Underlying Dynamics
Kinesiology
spellingShingle Action-Perception Coupling
Segmental Coordination
Survivability
Task Performance
Underlying Dynamics
Kinesiology
Palmer, Christopher Jay
Postures for Precision: An Ecological Approach to Marksmanship and the Issue of Warfighter Load.
description The goal of this dissertation was to understand the issue of load in a more operationally realistic way, while examining underlying segmental relations and postural regulation related to functional capability. The ecological approach provides a foundation for this work, as its approach seeks understanding across nested relations and at the level of the Organism-Environment system. First, a landing task was used to examine transitions from movement to upright stance, evaluating the effects of load on changes relevant to prospective control of action. Greater negative head angles, reductions in the field of regard, and reduced variability in orienting coordination (trunk-head relations) under load all suggest reductions in the postural affordances for visual perception. The heaviest load was not the worst; as the asymmetrically loaded Vest configuration had greater negative effects on postural affordances. This was further supported by the increased power and frequency content in the Center of Pressure dynamics, suggesting much more difficult postural regulation in this configuration. The second study examined the effects of load on dynamic marksmanship performance using large loads on the torso and small loads on the extremities (night vision goggles and extremity armor on the arms) while establishing two different postures determined by target placement. Load and Posture both had negative impacts on the speed-accuracy trade-off, with larger loads affecting gross postural transitions and smaller loads degrading fine-aiming performance. The more challenging posture degraded accuracy on target substantially, suggesting that reorientation of multiple segments may be necessary for assessing the consequences of load on marksmanship performance. Increases in the total coordinative variability of Head-Trunk-Gun relations with load at a high target suggests that increased inertial and interactive forces during movement "push" the system out of the optimal segmental relations. Moreover, the results from Postural-Focal coupling suggest that load "freezes" previously available degrees of freedom, making the system more deterministic and less flexible in goal-directed achievement. The two previous paradigms are joined in the third study to understand perception-action coupling during movement cessation to marksmanship transitions, a ubiquitous task in combat. Increased time to discriminate targets was found with load and was related to peak head velocities and the inability to dissipate energy at the head/eyes under load. Again, Load and Posture had significant effects on the speed-accuracy trade-off, especially at the load most similar to that seen in current missions. Segmental coordination in this effort ballasts the findings in study 2, as significant shifts from optimal Head-Trunk-Gun relations were observed with load as well as increased variability that was detrimental to task performance. This dissertation demonstrates that science can be "Operationalized" in a way that maintains scientific integrity during complex task analysis; providing additional insight into the issue of load across multiple scales of analysis related to functional capability and survivability in combat and others encumbered by load.
author Palmer, Christopher Jay
author_facet Palmer, Christopher Jay
author_sort Palmer, Christopher Jay
title Postures for Precision: An Ecological Approach to Marksmanship and the Issue of Warfighter Load.
title_short Postures for Precision: An Ecological Approach to Marksmanship and the Issue of Warfighter Load.
title_full Postures for Precision: An Ecological Approach to Marksmanship and the Issue of Warfighter Load.
title_fullStr Postures for Precision: An Ecological Approach to Marksmanship and the Issue of Warfighter Load.
title_full_unstemmed Postures for Precision: An Ecological Approach to Marksmanship and the Issue of Warfighter Load.
title_sort postures for precision: an ecological approach to marksmanship and the issue of warfighter load.
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 2012
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/open_access_dissertations/618
https://scholarworks.umass.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1619&context=open_access_dissertations
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