| Literature DB >> 30400296 |
Patrick G Dempsey1, Lydia M Kocher2, Mahiyar F Nasarwanji3, Jonisha P Pollard4, Ashley E Whitson5.
Abstract
Ergonomics is the scientific discipline that investigates the interactions between humans and systems to optimize both human and system performance for worker safety, health, and productivity. Ergonomics is frequently involved either in the design of emerging technologies or in strategies to alleviate unanticipated human performance problems with emerging technologies. This manuscript explores several such emerging issues and opportunities in the context of the mining sector. In mining, the equipment, tools, and procedures have changed considerably and continue to change. Body-worn technology provides a number of opportunities to advance the safety and health of miners, while teleoperation and autonomous mining equipment stand to benefit significantly from ergonomics applications in other sectors. This manuscript focuses on those issues and opportunities that can impact the safety and health of miners in the near term.Entities:
Keywords: ergonomics; human factors; mining; occupational safety and health
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30400296 PMCID: PMC6265775 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15112449
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Mining scenarios amenable to ergonomics research and practice.
| Research/Implementation Topic | Mining Scenarios |
|---|---|
| Workstation design | a. Equipment teleoperation workstations |
| Body-worn motion sensors | a. Trip and fall exposure assessment for ambulatory miners |
| Body-worn physiological and chemical sensors | a. Metabolic demands of repetitive tasks (e.g., shoveling, palletizing) |
| Passive exoskeletons | a. Jobs requiring repetitive motions and forceful exertions of particular joints such as the shoulder (e.g., hanging cable underground) or back (e.g., palletizing, shoveling) |
| Automation and autonomous systems | a. Monitoring and control of autonomous haul and dump trucks |