Operators' cognitive performance under extreme hot-humid exposure and its physiological-psychological mechanism based on ECG, fNIRS, and Eye Tracking
Yan Zhang, Ming Jia, Meng Li, Jianyu Wang, Xiangmin Hu, Zhihui Xu, and, Tao Chen

TL;DR
This study examines how extreme hot-humid conditions impair operators' cognitive functions, revealing physiological and psychological mechanisms through ECG, fNIRS, and eye tracking, and extends the maximal adaptability model to these conditions.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the neurophysiological mechanisms of cognitive impairment under extreme heat stress and verifies an extended maximal adaptability model in such environments.
Findings
Temporary improvement in simple reaction tasks above 35 WBGT
Rapid impairment in complex cognitive functions at high heat levels
Enhanced PFC connectivity temporarily improves performance under extreme heat
Abstract
Operators' cognitive functions are impaired significantly under extreme heat stress, potentially resulting in more severe secondary disasters. This research investigated the impact of elevated temperature and humidity (25 60%RH, 30 70%RH, 35 80%RH, 40 90%RH) on the cognitive functions and performance of operators. Meanwhile, we explored the psychological-physiological mechanism underlying the change in performance by electrocardiogram (ECG), functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), and eye tracking physiologically. Psychological aspects such as situation awareness, workload, and working memory were assessed. Eventually, we verified and extended the maximal adaptability model to the extreme condition. Unexpectedly, a temporary improvement in simple reaction tasks but rapid impairment in advanced cognitive functions (i.e. situation awareness, communication, working memory) was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTechnostress in Professional Settings
