Acute and 8-hour effects of alcohol (0.08% BAC) on younger and older pilots' simulator performance.

Author(s)
Taylor, J.L. Dolhert, N. Morrow, D.G. Friedman, L. & Yesavage, J.A.
Year
Abstract

This preliminary study examined the acute and 8-hour effects of alcohol at a target peak BAC of 0.08% on pilot performance. Fourteen younger (mean age 27.6 years) and fourteen older (mean age 60.3 years) pilots flew a Frasca 141 simulator in a scenario that included ATC communications and emergencies. Plots were tested during an alcohol and placebo condition at three timepoints: predrink, actue intoxication, and 8 hours post-drink. Of eight performance measures, two showed statically significant effects related to alcohol. First, cockpit monitoring was poorer when pilots were intoxicated, with recovery at 8 hours. Second, younger pilots made more communication errors under the influence and there was no significant recovery at 8 hours. Older pilots made more communication errors than younger pilots, but possibly because of methodological problems, older pilots' communication performance was not significantly impaired by alcohol. These results provide direction for future research.

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Publication

Library number
950145 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine, Vol. 65 (1994), (August), p. 718-725, 28 ref.

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