4.3 Article

Flying under pressure: Effects of anxiety on attention and gaze behavior in aviation

Journal

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jarmac.2014.04.010

Keywords

Anxiety; Visual scanning; Entropy; Attentional control; Eye-trackinga

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Landing an aircraft is a complex task that requires effective attentional control in order to be successful. The present study examined how anxiety may influence gaze behavior during the performance of simulated landings. Participants undertook simulated landings in low visibility conditions which required the use of cockpit instruments in order to obtain guidance information. Landings were performed in either anxiety or control conditions, with anxiety being manipulated using a combination of ego-threatening instructions and monetary incentives. Results showed an increase in percentage dwell time toward the outside world in the anxiety conditions. Visual scanning entropy, which is the predictability of visual scanning behavior, showed an increase in the randomness of scanning behavior when anxious. Furthermore, change in scanning randomness from the pre-test to anxiety conditions positively correlated with both the change in cognitive anxiety and change in performance error. These results support the view point that anxiety can negatively affect attentional control. (c) 2014 Society for Applied Research in Memory and Cognition. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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