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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    International archives of occupational and environmental health 52 (1983), S. 329-339 
    ISSN: 1432-1246
    Keywords: Vigilance ; EEG ; Secondary motor task ; Occupational monotony ; Central nervous arousal
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The SIFA is a paced secondary motor task, which is expected to monitor the train driver's ‘fitness for service’ on engines of the German Federal Railway. Disregard of the device leads to an emergency braking. As, in contrast to a true vigilance test, the SIFA cycles are characterized by paced and clearly supraliminal signals; we presumed that adequate operation of the device does not necessarily correspond to sustained attention of the driver. This study shows how the SIFA can be effectively tested under laboratory conditions. Our design allows the reduction of vigilance as evident from the EEG, and a controlled investigation of the possible connection between different modes of SIFA operation, physical load, and different levels of vigilance. Finally, some sample registrations show that phases of low vigilance do occur and do not prevent adequate operation of the device. It is suggested that SIFA-trained persons can operate the SIFA in phases of low vigilance because a specific central nervous arousal reaction enables them to raise their level of vigilance in synchronisation with the SIFA cycles to a degree that makes the successful performance of this task possible. A future report will provide a quantified analysis of the correlation between vigilance reduction and SIFA operation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    International archives of occupational and environmental health 52 (1983), S. 341-352 
    ISSN: 1432-1246
    Keywords: EEG ; Job monitoring ; Occupational monotony ; Secondary task ; Vigilance
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The SIFA is a paced secondary motor task used on modern rail engines. Adequate performance of this task is regarded as a guarantee for the train-driver's long-term attention. Observation as well as several preliminary studies made us doubt this claim. Our considerations, which led to the development of an experiment that allows SIFA-simulation and vigilance reduction under laboratory conditions, have been reported in an earlier part of this study. Our present investigation of the SIFA device under laboratory conditions of sensory deprivation, using a test-group of 12 experienced train drivers of the German Railway, proves that a paced secondary motor task like the SIFA can be operated in stages of reduced vigilance down to light sleep. Under conditions of impaired vigilance, the SIFA is correctly operated either in response to a warning signal or spontaneously within a physiological arousal reaction, which raises the driver's vigilance sufficiently to allow a goal-directed motor activity. Attendance of the SIFA interrupts, but does not prevent, phases of low vigilance. The inefficiency of the SIFA as a vigilance monitor was proved by means of EEG recordings which allowed us to establish a relationship between different stages of vigilance and the modes of SIFA-operation. Finally, it became evident that the number of warnings, respectively spontaneous operations of the device, does not correspond to the drivers' average stage of vigilance.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1439-6327
    Keywords: EEG ; Heart rate ; Job monitoring ; Occupational monotony ; Professional training ; Alertness/drowsiness
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Twelve truck drivers operated the train function safety circuit (SIFA), a paced secondary task used as a job monitor on German railways engines, under laboratory conditions of extreme monotony, in a comparison with 12 train drivers who were well acquainted with SIFA. Alertness was determined by means of EEG evaluations. Heart rate was monitored as the parameter for physical load, and the precoded SIFA tasks as the active response parameter. In spite of significantly more frequent and more distinct decreases in alertness, the SIFA-trained subjects (TS) performed better. Nine out of 12 TS reached the stage of light sleep at least once during the experimental run, as compared to 4 out of 12 untrained subjects (US). Nevertheless, the ratio acoustic warnings/occurrence of light sleep was significantly lower in TS (P 〈 0.01), and there were three operational errors (equivalent to emergency braking) in US. Whereas US received fewer acoustic warnings in the stages of slightly reduced alertness, this trend was reversed as soon as low frequency 9-activity appeared in the EEG. A time-related calculation of the cross-correlation coefficients between SIFA operation, a-activity, 9-EEG-activity, and heart rate showed that timing of SIFA operation interrupting phases of light sleep correlated significantly and positively with increases in heart rate. The results suggest that a mechanism of rhythmic central nervous arousal interrupting phases of decreased alertness/drowsiness can be learned, whereas the physiological consequences of the effort to prevent the deterioration of performance under conditions of monotony are not reduced by professional adaptation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1439-6327
    Keywords: EEG ; Heart rate ; Monotony stress ; Occupational monotony ; Alertness ; Traffic security
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Twelve experienced train drivers were asked to operate the train function safety circuit (SIFA) — a paced secondary motor task which is expected to guarantee the driver's fitness for service on engines of the German Federal Railway — under laboratory conditions of extreme monotony. In spite of massive decreases in vigilance as shown by 9-activity in the EEG, all subjects were able to operate the device without major errors. A prerequisite for adequate performance is an EEG-defined arousal reaction, which is synchronized with the SIFA cycles. For 7 subjects the time-related cross-correlation coefficients between SIFA operation, a-activity (indicative of alertness), 9-activity (indicative of reduced vigilance), and heart rate were calculated. The central-nervous arousal found in the EEG corresponded to distinct increases in heart rate. The moments of SIFA operation after phases of light sleep correlated significantly and positively with increases in heart rate. These increases constituted a physiological over-compensation as far as the physical readiness was concerned which reached its peak after the task had been performed satisfactorily, constituting additional and superfluous occupational stress. The results of this study indicate clearly that monotony stress is not a result of occupational monotony itself, but the result of the physiological effort which is required in order to regain a level of alertness which allows adequate performance under monotonous conditions.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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