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  • An aircraft seat discomfort scale using item response theory

    Author(s)
    Menegon, Lizandra da Silva
    Vincenzi, Silvana Ligia
    de Andrade, Dalton Francisco
    Barbetta, Pedro Alberto
    Vink, Peter
    Diaz Merino, Eugenio Andres
    Griffith University Author(s)
    De Andrade, Dominique F.
    Year published
    2019
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    The purpose of this study is to construct an aircraft seat discomfort scale and verify the evidence of its validity and reliability. We developed a questionnaire and presented it to 1500 Brazilian passengers at an airport. The data analysis included: 1) factor analysis; 2) the analysis of the items to be used in the scale created using Item Response Theory. The scale covered all levels, from “without discomfort” to “maximum discomfort”. At the level of minimal, a passenger feels that the aircraft seat is cramped and has little space. Discomfort tends to increase when passengers are unable to perform desired activities (eg: ...
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    The purpose of this study is to construct an aircraft seat discomfort scale and verify the evidence of its validity and reliability. We developed a questionnaire and presented it to 1500 Brazilian passengers at an airport. The data analysis included: 1) factor analysis; 2) the analysis of the items to be used in the scale created using Item Response Theory. The scale covered all levels, from “without discomfort” to “maximum discomfort”. At the level of minimal, a passenger feels that the aircraft seat is cramped and has little space. Discomfort tends to increase when passengers are unable to perform desired activities (eg: reading, sleeping), which causes irritation and disappointment. The maximum discomfort level occurs when noise disrupts activities and an aircraft seat is considered hard. The scale developed presented indications that it is reliable and valid, proving to be a useful tool for identifying levels of discomfort in aircraft seats.
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    Journal Title
    APPLIED ERGONOMICS
    Volume
    77
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apergo.2018.12.015
    Subject
    Sports science and exercise
    Medical physiology
    Design
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/384481
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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