Evaluation of Performance of Mike Equipment Operators By Indirect Measurement Of Stress

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Edehran Lotfi Terrence Stobbe
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
7
File Size:
319 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1986

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Mobile excavating and handling equipment are important 'tools of trade' in the mining and construction industries. The handling of this equipment must be mastered so that its limitations are learned and its harmonic use with other pieces of equipment is practiced. he sudden growth in mobile excavating and handling equipment type, size, complexity, and application started after the Second World War. This growth has not been accompanied by pertinent human factors research. Investigations into the proper and safe handling of such equipment with due regard for human and machine limitations are lacking. One such piece of equipment is the front-end loader (FEL), which during one cycle of operation excavates, loads, and hauls, (Lotfi and Adler, 1981). The diversity of action by FEL is archetypical among excavating and handling equipment. Front-end loaders are the most rapidly proliferating type of equipment in the industry. Also, front-end loaders are involved in the highest number of accidents involving mobile excavating and handling equipment. In the period 1970 to 1978, FEL's were involved in 27% of all mobile equipment accidents in surface mining (Adkins, 1980). Improving operational safety and efficiency will reduce the frequency of accidents. The performance of the operators can be evaluated and improved by the following steps: first, define the operating conditions and the operator workload intensity (Adler and Lotfi, 1983), second, monitor the operator to evaluate his task performance, and third, make recommendations based on the findings. The stressful nature of the equipment operating task is an acknowledged fact (Field, 1980). However, a systematic measurement of stress evaluation is lacking. In this paper, methods for measuring mental stress and fatigue, are defined, the mental load which caused the stress is outlined, and stress measurement methods are proposed. MENTAL STRESS Mental stress has been described as a "specific somatic response to damage or the threat of damage by several environmental agents"
Citation

APA: Edehran Lotfi Terrence Stobbe  (1986)  Evaluation of Performance of Mike Equipment Operators By Indirect Measurement Of Stress

MLA: Edehran Lotfi Terrence Stobbe Evaluation of Performance of Mike Equipment Operators By Indirect Measurement Of Stress. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1986.

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