Publication | Closed Access
Peripheral Target Recognition and Visual Field Narrowing in Aviators and Nonaviators
45
Citations
23
References
1995
Year
Foveal Cognitive LoadEngineeringNeurolinguisticsBiometricsCognitionAttentionVisual Field NarrowingSocial SciencesEarly VisionVisual FieldImage AnalysisCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceMachine VisionPeripheral Target RecognitionOphthalmologyRecognition AccuracyRehabilitationVision ResearchVisual ProcessingComputer VisionCognitive ErgonomicsVisual FunctionEye TrackingNeuroscience
In the two experiments that examined recognition accuracy in the near visual periphery as a function of foveal cognitive load, aviators were shown to have larger effective functional visual fields than nonaviators. The aviators appeared to be far less susceptible to the visual field narrowing found in nonaviators. The narrowing found in nonaviators suggested a tunnel-vision-like pattern. The rather small effect of load increases on aviator performance was likely due to specialized training and experience. Student aviators who averaged only 70 flight hr were clearly superior to nonaviators on peripheral recognition with a concomitant foveal task.
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