Dual-Task Performance During Traverse Climbing: Human Factors Implications for Emergency-Response Organisations

Two experiments were conducted to investigate how performance on a primary rock climbing task is affected by the inclusion of a secondary word memory task. In Experiment 1, twelve experienced rock climbers completed a dual traverse climb and word memory task, with participants’ performance analysed...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Green, Alexander Louis
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Psychology 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/7017
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-70172015-03-30T15:30:59ZDual-Task Performance During Traverse Climbing: Human Factors Implications for Emergency-Response OrganisationsGreen, Alexander LouisHuman FactorsDual TaskRock ClimbingEmotionEmergencyMemoryEfficiencyTraverseTwo experiments were conducted to investigate how performance on a primary rock climbing task is affected by the inclusion of a secondary word memory task. In Experiment 1, twelve experienced rock climbers completed a dual traverse climb and word memory task, with participants’ performance analysed relative to their single task performance (climbing alone and word memory alone). Participants’ climbing efficiency and word recall were significantly lower in the dual-task condition. Experiment 2 examined the effects of emotional content on climbing performance. Fifteen experienced rock climbers completed two dual-tasks, in which they were asked to recall negatively valenced or neutral words. Climbing efficiency, climbing distance, and word recall were all significantly lower in the dual-task conditions, relative to the single-task conditions. Climbing efficiency and climbing distance were also significantly lower in the negative word dual-task, relative to the neutral word dual-task. The findings from these two experiments have important human factors implications for occupational settings that require climbing-like operations, including search and rescue and fire-fighting.University of Canterbury. Psychology2012-09-14T02:32:10Z2012-09-14T02:32:10Z2012Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/7017enNZCUCopyright Alexander Louis Greenhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Human Factors
Dual Task
Rock Climbing
Emotion
Emergency
Memory
Efficiency
Traverse
spellingShingle Human Factors
Dual Task
Rock Climbing
Emotion
Emergency
Memory
Efficiency
Traverse
Green, Alexander Louis
Dual-Task Performance During Traverse Climbing: Human Factors Implications for Emergency-Response Organisations
description Two experiments were conducted to investigate how performance on a primary rock climbing task is affected by the inclusion of a secondary word memory task. In Experiment 1, twelve experienced rock climbers completed a dual traverse climb and word memory task, with participants’ performance analysed relative to their single task performance (climbing alone and word memory alone). Participants’ climbing efficiency and word recall were significantly lower in the dual-task condition. Experiment 2 examined the effects of emotional content on climbing performance. Fifteen experienced rock climbers completed two dual-tasks, in which they were asked to recall negatively valenced or neutral words. Climbing efficiency, climbing distance, and word recall were all significantly lower in the dual-task conditions, relative to the single-task conditions. Climbing efficiency and climbing distance were also significantly lower in the negative word dual-task, relative to the neutral word dual-task. The findings from these two experiments have important human factors implications for occupational settings that require climbing-like operations, including search and rescue and fire-fighting.
author Green, Alexander Louis
author_facet Green, Alexander Louis
author_sort Green, Alexander Louis
title Dual-Task Performance During Traverse Climbing: Human Factors Implications for Emergency-Response Organisations
title_short Dual-Task Performance During Traverse Climbing: Human Factors Implications for Emergency-Response Organisations
title_full Dual-Task Performance During Traverse Climbing: Human Factors Implications for Emergency-Response Organisations
title_fullStr Dual-Task Performance During Traverse Climbing: Human Factors Implications for Emergency-Response Organisations
title_full_unstemmed Dual-Task Performance During Traverse Climbing: Human Factors Implications for Emergency-Response Organisations
title_sort dual-task performance during traverse climbing: human factors implications for emergency-response organisations
publisher University of Canterbury. Psychology
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/7017
work_keys_str_mv AT greenalexanderlouis dualtaskperformanceduringtraverseclimbinghumanfactorsimplicationsforemergencyresponseorganisations
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