Abstract

Fifteen participants were exposed in an enclosed environmental chamber to investigate the effects of elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration on their cognitive abilities. Three CO2 conditions (1500, 3500, and 5000 ppm) were achieved by constant air supply and additional ultrapure CO2. All participants received the same exposure under each condition, during which they performed six cognitive tests evaluating human perception, attention, short-term working memory, risky decision-making, and executive ability. Generalized additive mixed effects model (GAMM) results showed no statistically significant differences in performance on the reaction time (RT) tests, the speed perception test, and the 2-back test. This suggests that elevated CO2 concentrations below 5000 ppm did not affect participants’ perception and short-term working memory. However, a significant increase in response time was observed in the visual search (VS) test, the balloon simulation risk test (BART), and the Stroop test at 5000 ppm compared to lower exposure concentrations. The slower responses reflected the detrimental effects of elevated CO2 concentrations on visual attention, risky decision-making, and executive ability. The findings suggest that the control level of CO2 concentrations should be tighter in enclosed workplaces where rapid response and operational safety are required.

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