Body sway at sea for two visual tasks and three stance widths

Thomas A. Stoffregen, Sebastien Villard, Yawen Yu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: On land, body sway is influenced by stance width (the distance between the feet) and by visual tasks engaged in during stance. While wider stance can be used to stabilize the body against ship motion and crewmembers are obliged to carry out many visual tasks while standing, the influence of these factors on the kinematics of body sway has not been studied at sea. Methods: Crewmembers of the R/V Atlantis stood on a force plate from which we obtained data on the positional variability of the center of pressure (COP). The sea state was 2 on the Beaufort scale. We varied stance width (5 cm, 17 cm, and 30 cm) and the nature of the visual tasks. In the Inspection task, participants viewed a plain piece of white paper, while in the Search task they counted the number of target letters that appeared in a block of text. Results: Search task performance was similar to reports from terrestrial studies. Variability of the COP position was reduced during the Search task relative to the Inspection task. Variability was also reduced during wide stance relative to narrow stance. The influence of stance width was greater than has been observed in terrestrial studies. Conclusions: These results suggest that two factors that influence postural sway on land (variations in stance width and in the nature of visual tasks) also influence sway at sea. We conclude that - in mild sea states - the influence of these factors is not suppressed by ship motion.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1039-1043
Number of pages5
JournalAviation Space and Environmental Medicine
Volume80
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2009

Keywords

  • Human performance at sea
  • Posture
  • Stance

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