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Human Off-Road Mobility, Preference, and Target-Detection Performance with Monocular, Biocular, and Binocular Night Vision Goggles

Human Off-Road Mobility, Preference, and Target-Detection Performance with Monocular, Biocular, and Binocular Night Vision GogglesAuthors: Edward Bender, V. G. Cuqlock-Knopp, Dawn E. Sipes, John O. Merritt, Warren Torgerson
Publisher: Storming Media
Category: Book

Buy New: $27.95
as of 9/7/2010 01:22 MDT details



Seller: stormingmediaorders
Sales Rank: 7172743

Media: Spiral-bound
Pages: 60

ISBN: 1423585208
EAN: 9781423585206
ASIN: 1423585208

Publication Date: 1996
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
This is a ARMY RESEARCH LAB ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND MD report procured by the Pentagon and made available for public release. It has been reproduced in the best form available to the Pentagon. It is not spiral-bound, but rather assembled with Velobinding in a soft, white linen cover. The Storming Media report number is A513413. The abstract provided by the Pentagon follows: The present studies examined the hypothesis that participants who are required to scan for targets would perform better for a number of measures when wearing the monocular night vision goggle than when wearing biocular or the binocular goggles. These findings would be different from the findings discussed in the 1995 report in which participants were not required to scan for targets. No-moon and 3/4 moon experiments were conducted using National Guardsmen. The difficulties that each participant encountered while walking through rough, off- road terrain were recorded by an independent observer. The observer recorded the participant's course-traversal times and the number and types of targets detected. The studies also collected data about subjective preference for the three types of goggles. Results replicated the previous studies, which found that the binocular goggle yielded better performance and was preferred to the other two goggles. The monocular goggle, again, showed no consistent difference from the biocular goggle for any of the four sets of dependent measures. The addition of the target-detection task failed to change the relative ordering of the monocular goggle versus the biocular or binocular goggles.

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