Rue, C A, Myers, S D, Vine, C A J, Nevola, V R, Lee, B J, Walker, E F, Coakley, S L, Flood, Tessa R ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8897-0957, Doherty, J, Jackson, S, Greeves, J P and Blacker, S D
(2025)
A job task analysis of the physical demands of manually preparing a 4-person battle trench as a military defensive position.
Applied Ergonomics, 127.
104520.
ISSN 0003-6870
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Published Version
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Abstract
Aim: Conduct a Job Task Analysis (JTA) to quantify the physical demands of preparing a defensive position by British Army Ground Close Combat (GCC) roles. Method: Subjective data to describe the demands of preparing a defensive position were gathered from focus groups (n = 90) and questionnaires (n = 1495). Eight GCC personnel were observed preparing a defensive position which involved digging, lifting, and carrying materials. The oxygen cost of digging was measured using staged reconstructions at slow (12 shovels min−1, n = 16) and fast (22 shovels min−1, n = 13) rates. Results: The JTA identified digging trenches, filling sandbags, and shovelling debris as principal tasks of preparing a defensive position. Oxygen cost during the fast-digging rate (27.45 ± 4.93 ml kg−1 min−1) was 26 % greater than the slower rate (21.75 ± 2.83 ml kg−1 min−1; p < 0.001, d = −1.461). Conclusion: Digging a defensive position was identified by military experts as a critical job-task, with variability in metabolic cost dependent on work rate. Data may inform selection, training, and technology interventions to improve task performance.
Impact and Reach
Statistics
Additional statistics for this dataset are available via IRStats2.