Native American Flute Ergonomics
Clinton F. Goss

TL;DR
This study surveyed ergonomic issues among Native American flute players, analyzing physical factors and providing a predictive formula for comfortable flute size, highlighting discomfort prevalence and gender differences.
Contribution
It introduces a predictive formula linking physical measurements to flute size and emphasizes the importance of ergonomic customization for players.
Findings
47-64% of players experience physical discomfort
A formula with r = +.650 correlates physical measurements to flute size
Over 10% report moderate discomfort on average
Abstract
This study surveyed ergonomic issues in 308 Native American flute players. It also correlated the physical measurements of a subgroup of 33 participants with the largest flute they found comfortable. The data was used to derive a predictive formula for the largest comfortable flute based on physical measurements. The median age of players was 63 years with a mean of 6.9 years playing Native American flute. Females reported significantly less time playing the instrument (p = .004), but significantly faster self-reported progress rates (p = .001). Physical discomfort was experienced by 47-64% of players at least some of the time. Over 10% of players reported moderate discomfort on an average basis. Females report significantly higher maximum and average physical discomfort than males (p < .001 and p = .015, respectively). Height, arm span, hand span, and reported length of time playing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusicians’ Health and Performance · Ergonomics and Musculoskeletal Disorders · Motor Control and Adaptation
