The effects of VDT resolution on visual fatigue and readability were studied. Two kinds of displays with different resolutions (1664 x 1200 pixels and 720 x 350 pixels) and fonts were used. In the first experiment, the subjects read from each display for 1 h to induce fatigue. Reading speed and blink rate while reading were measured. Eye movements during visual smooth pursuit tracking tasks were studied before and after reading; quantitative scoring of eye movement performance showed no significant changes. In the second experiment, readability tests with three different character sizes on both displays were conducted and resulting reading eye movements were analysed. For readability of sufficiently large characters, no significant difference between the high and the standard VDT could be detected. However, for very small characters, higher resolution improved readability.
Arterial pressure is still one of the most important measures in estimating the required dose of inhaled anaesthetics. It is measured easily and reacts rapidly which makes it suitable as a variable for feedback control of depth of anaesthesia. Fuzzy logic, a novel approach to feedback control, was used to control arterial pressure in 10 patients during intraabdominal surgery by automatic adjustment of the concentration of isoflurane in fresh gas. During anaesthesia, fuzzy control periods of 45-min duration were alternated randomly with human control periods of equal duration. During the skin incision period (-3 to + 12 min) 48.2% of all fuzzy control pressure values were within +/- 10% of the desired mean arterial pressure compared with 40.4% of the human control values (P < 0.05). The corresponding values for the remainder of the operation were 78.3% and 83.2%, respectively. Thus fuzzy out-performed human control at skin incision, but was slightly inferior during the rest of the operation. We conclude that fuzzy logic is a promising new technique for control of isoflurane delivery during routine anaesthesia.
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