| Literature DB >> 35557612 |
Baoquan Cheng1,2,3, Xiaowei Luo2, Xiang Mei3, Huihua Chen1, Jianling Huang1.
Abstract
Safety is the most important concern in the construction industry, and construction workers' attention allocation is closely associated with their hazard recognition and safety behaviors. The recent emergence of eye-tracking techniques allows researchers in construction safety to further investigate construction workers' visual attention allocation during hazard recognition. The existing eye-tracking studies in construction safety need to be comprehensively understood, to provide practical suggestions for future research and on-site safety management. This study aims to summarize previous studies on the application of eye-tracking techniques to the construction safety context through a systematic literature review. The literature search and study selection process included 22 eligible studies. Content analysis was then carried out from participant selection, device selection, task design, area of interest determination, feature extraction, data analysis, and main findings. Major limitations of the existing studies are identified, and recommendations for future research in theoretical development, experiment improvement, and data analysis method advancement are proposed to address these limitations. Even though the application of eye-tracking techniques in construction safety research is still in its early stage, it is worth future continuous attention because relevant discoveries would be of great significance to hazard control and safety management in the construction industry.Entities:
Keywords: construction safety; eye-tracking; hazard recognition; neuromanagement in engineering; review
Year: 2022 PMID: 35557612 PMCID: PMC9087038 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2022.891725
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 5.152
FIGURE 1Overview of review methodology.
Summary information of existing eye-tracking studies in construction safety.
| References | Journal | Participants | Device | Experiment task | Eye-tracking indicator | Analysis method | Main findings |
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| Safety Science | Ten construction workers and 15 students | ViewPoint EyeTracker | Visually search hazards in four virtual construction sites | Fixation count and fixation sequence | Independent and paired | While expertise aided experienced construction workers in evaluating visible and hidden hazards substantially quicker than fresh workers, it had little effect on their ability to identify hazards accurately. |
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| Journal of Management in Engineering | 31 construction workers (27) | SR Research EyeLink II | Visually search hazards in 35 given images of site scenes | Time to first fixation, fixation time ratio, and run count | Permutation simulation | Tacit safety knowledge obtained from work experience and injury exposure significantly improve construction workers’ hazard recognition. |
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| Journal of Construction Engineering and Management | 31 construction workers (21) | SR Research EyeLink II21qa | Visually search hazards in 35 given images of site scenes | Fixation count, fixation time ratio, and run count | Analysis of variance and discriminant analysis | Hazard recognition skills significantly affect construction workers’ visual search strategies, and thus eye-tracking indicators can be applied to identify individuals with poor hazard recognition skills. |
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| Journal of Construction Engineering and Management | Eight construction workers | EyeTech VT3 | Visually search hazards in 24 given images of site scenes | Fixation time | Interrupted longitudinal regression analysis | The eye-tracking system can provide feedback for hazard recognition performance and develop an efficient personalized safety training intervention for construction workers. |
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| Journal of Construction Engineering and Management | 14 students (11) | Tobii Pro Glasses 2 | Walk along a path in the presence of other workers who are conducting their normal activities on the job site | Time to first fixation, fixation time, fixation count, and run count | Permutation simulation | Construction workers with higher situation awareness periodically looked sown and scanned ahead to remain fully aware of the environment and its associated hazards when walking. |
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| Automation in Construction | Five students and one construction professional | Tobii Pro Glasses 2 | Visually search hazards in real construction sites | Fixation time, fixation count, search duration, mean fixation duration, visual attention index, and fixation time ratio | Descriptive statistical comparisons | Integrating computer-version and eye-tracking enables automating and scaling personalized safety training. |
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| Journal of Construction Engineering and Management | 31 construction workers (28) | SR Research EyeLink II21qa | Visually search hazards in 35 given images of site scenes | Fixation count and run count | Correlational analysis and permutation analysis | Extraversion, conscientiousness, and openness to experience significantly affect construction workers’ attention allocations and workers who are less extroverted, more conscientious and more open to experience have better performance in hazard recognition. |
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| Journal of Construction Engineering and Management | 23 construction workers | EyeTech VT3 | Visually search hazards in 12 given images of site scenes | Search duration, fixation count, fixation time, mean fixation duration, fixation spatial density, fixation count ratio, fixation time ratio, and saccade velocity | Regression analysis | Visual search patterns are predictive of hazard recognition performance of construction workers, and personalized safety training intervention can enhance their hazard recognition ability by improving their visual search patterns. |
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| Automation in construction | 12 construction workers | Pupil Lab | Operate an excavator while recognizing and responding to potential hazards that may cause collisions in a simulation system | Blink count, blink duration, pupil diameter, percent change in pupil diameter, fixation time, and fixation count | Analysis of variance and spearman correlation analysis | The hazard recognition ability of construction workers decreases with the mental fatigue level increasing, and it is associated with the changes in the distribution of construction workers’ visual patterns. |
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| International Journal of Occupational Safety and Ergonomics | 42 construction workers (32) | SMI iView X | Visually search hazards in eight given images of site scenes | Fixation time ratio, and mean fixation duration | Logistic regression analysis | The effect of strengthened working memory on the detection rate through increased search efficiency is more apparent in high visual clutter. |
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| Safety Science | 48 students | Tobii Pro Glasses 2 | Visually search hazards in a structural laboratory | Time to the first fixation | Analysis of variance and discriminant analysis | Hazard recognition ability can be better assessed by comprehensively considering eye-tracking and near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) indicators. |
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| Safety Science | 47 students | Tobii Pro Glasses 2 | Visually search hazards in a structural laboratory | Fixation sequence | Hierarchical clustering | Successful hazard recognitions have similar visual search patterns. |
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| Journal of Construction Engineering and Management | 55 students | Tobii T60XL | Visually search hazards in 20 given images of site scenes | The accuracy rate of the first fixation, fixation count, intersection coefficient, search duration, and fixation count in the attention center zone | Descriptive statistical comparisons | More distinct hazards and a tidy site reduce construction workers’ cognitive loads in hazard recognition, while site brightness has positive and negative effects. |
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| International Journal of Occupational Safety and Ergonomics | 42construction workers (30) | SMI iView X | Visually search hazards in 15 given images of site scenes | Fixation time | Logistic regression analysis | Navigated safety inspection can improve hazards recognition effectiveness, and efficiency in scenes with high and medium visual clutters. A random search model can describe the visual patterns of construction workers in hazard recognition tasks. |
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| International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 85 construction workers (55) | Tobbi Pro Fusion | Visually search hazards in 120 given images of site scenes | Fixation sequence | Temporal qualitative analysis | In the potential electrical contact hazards, the intersection of the energy-releasing source and wire is the cognitively driven visual area that construction workers are likely to prioritize. And as for PPE-related hazards, scene-related, and norm-guided are two different visual strategies generalized according to the workers’ visual cognitive logic. |
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| KSCE Journal of Civil Engineering | 47 students | Tobii Pro Glasses 2 | Visually search hazards in a structural laboratory | Fixation sequence | Crisp-set qualitative analysis | Electricity-related hazards should be recognized based on object identification, while struck-by hazards should be identified based on the objects and their pivot points or probable movement trajectories. |
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| Advanced Engineering Informatics | Five engineers, five laborers workers, and five students | Tobii Pro X2–30 Hz | Receive two different forms of safety training (i.e., a traditional presentation with 11 slides and a construction task level serious game) | Time to first fixation, and fixation time | Analysis of variance | The effect of safety training is significantly affected by the background of trainee construction workers and training methods. |
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| Advanced Engineering Informatics | 32 students | - | Clean the road while recognizing and avoiding struck-by hazards caused by surrounding construction equipment in an immersive virtual construction site | Pupil diameter and saccadic velocity | Analysis of variance and support vector machine | There exist significant differences in electrocardiogram (ECG) and eye-tracking indicators of construction workers between recognizing and ignoring hazards, and thus these biosignals can be applied for inattentiveness identification. |
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| Safety Science | 48 students | Tobii Pro Glasses 2 | Visually search hazards in a structural laboratory | Pupil diameter | Analysis of variance, permutation analysis, and correlation analysis | Construction worksites with different hazard types and levels of scene complexity induce different cognitive patterns and cognitive demands and should thus be treated individually. |
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| International Journal of Occupational Safety and Ergonomics | 30 construction workers | SMI iView X | Visually search hazards in eight given images of site scenes | Fixation time, fixation count, fixation count ratio, fixation time ratio, and mean fixation duration | Paired | Semantic cues drive construction workers’ selective attention toward goal-relevant information more effectively, thus improving their hazard recognition performance. |
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| Journal of Construction Engineering and Management | 30 students | HTC Vive Pro VR headset | Visually search hazards in an immersive virtual construction site | Fixation count, fixation time, mean fixation duration, saccade velocity, and pupil diameter | K-nearest neighbor (k-NN) and support vector machine (SVM) | It is feasible to combine eye-tracking with EEG to detect construction workers’ ability to recognize hazards. |
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| Safety Science | 59 construction workers (supervisors) (53) | Tobii Pro Glasses 2 | Visually search hazards in 29 given images of site scenes | Fixation count | Nonparametric | Inattentional blindness is responsible for about 50% of the safety hazard perception of construction workers, and safety knowledge nearly does not affect inattentional blindness. |