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Evaluation of Aircrew Low-Intensity Threat Laser Eye Protection. | LitMetric

Evaluation of Aircrew Low-Intensity Threat Laser Eye Protection.

Mil Med

The Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine, INC., 6720A Rockledge Drive, Bethesda, MD.

Published: March 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study evaluated prototype low-intensity threat laser eye protection (LIT-LEP) spectacles for their effectiveness in US Coast Guard cockpits and compatibility with night vision goggles.
  • The research focused on performance in various tasks, including vision acuity, color vision screening, and reaction times, comparing LIT-LEP to a control group without eye protection.
  • Results showed that LIT-LEP performed well in most areas, particularly for brightness and color vision, but highlighted some challenges with color discrimination in specific flight display colors, which will inform future design and acquisition decisions.

Article Abstract

Prototype low-intensity threat laser eye protection (LIT-LEP) spectacles were evaluated for US Coast Guard (USCG) cockpits and night vision goggle compatibility. The impetus for interest in aviation LIT-LEP is driven in part by the fact that easily accessible 0.5-2.0 W high-power laser pointers exceed safety standards for direct on-axis viewing. A repeated-measures experimental design was used to assess LIT-LEP performance relative to a no-LEP control for the following tasks: Near- and far contrast acuity, night vision goggle far-contrast acuity, emissive and non-emissive light source color-vision screening, and USCG multifunctional display color symbol discrimination reaction time and accuracy. Near- and far-contrast acuity results demonstrated good LIT-LEP performance for typical in- and out-of-cockpit lighting conditions. Night vision goggle performance suffered marginally at only one contrast level (85%; 20/30 acuity line). Color vision test results showed good color balance in that S-, M-, and L-cone performance did not demonstrate a clinical diagnostic color defect for emissive or non-emissive light sources when wearing LIT-LEP. Color symbol discrimination reaction-time-task results based on inverse efficiency scores revealed that some non-primary flight display colors exhibited a combination of slower speed and decreased accuracy. The findings will contribute to an acquisition decision as well as guide future LEP designs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/milmed/usy335DOI Listing

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