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Price: EUR 250.00Authors: Liu, Jian | Kim, Sukwon
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: The objective of the current study was to evaluate the effect of walkway perturbation training on human dynamic walking stability and slip propensity. A new walkway perturbation training program was developed using an instrumented, split-belt treadmill. Walkway surface perturbation was composed of multiple, randomized perturbation pulses. Each pulse was created by sudden accelerating the treadmill belt underneath the dominant foot briefly. Five healthy older adults were involved in a laboratory study. An inertial measurement unit was attached to the subject’s low back region to record 3D acceleration. Maximum Lyapunov exponent (maxLE) and transitional acceleration of whole body center of mass …(TA_COM) were computed to quantify the local dynamic stability and slip propensity, respectively. The results indicated a significant training effect on both maxLE and TA_COM. It was concluded that the walkway perturbation training program significantly improved local dynamic stability and reduced slip propensity. Show more
Keywords: fall prevention, perturbation training, acceleration, dynamic stability
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-2012-0605-3352
Citation: Work, vol. 41, no. Supplement 1, pp. 3352-3354, 2012
Authors: Flynn, James | Di Pilla, Steven | Vidal, Keith
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: The measurement of walkway slip resistance is required to assess the risk of slipping. Unlike other countries, the U.S. has not decided upon a single approach to the measurement of slip resistance. Several types of tribometers are available to measure slip resistance however, the measured value of the slip resistance of a given surface has been found to be tribometer specific. The introduction of ASTM International Standard F2508 Standard Practice for Validation and Calibration of Walkway Tribometers Using Reference Surfaces, has produced a method which allows validation of each type of tribometer and the values generated during testing.
Keywords: Tribometer, Slip, Walkway safety, Slip resistance
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-2012-0606-3355
Citation: Work, vol. 41, no. Supplement 1, pp. 3355-3357, 2012
Authors: Johnson, Daniel
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Falls near the bottom of a flight of stairs have resulted from an illusion that the person was stepping off onto the bottom landing when the person was still two treads or more above the landing. The illusion is caused by poor lighting and design defects built into the stairway. The poor lighting may be attributed to a building code that allows inadequate lighting near the bottom of external stairs in private residences. The design defect of truncating handrails before they reach the bottom tread may be due to confusion between “guards” and “handrails” and this confusion also appears to …be promulgated by building code. Show more
Keywords: Stairs, handrails, guards, falls, lighting, design
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-2012-0607-3358
Citation: Work, vol. 41, no. Supplement 1, pp. 3358-3362, 2012
Authors: Chang, Wen-Ruey | Matz, Simon | Chang, Chien-Chi
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: The available coefficient of friction (ACOF) for human locomotion is the maximum coefficient of friction that can be supported without a slip at the shoe and floor interface. A statistical model was introduced to estimate the probability of slip by comparing the ACOF with the required coefficient of friction, assuming that both coefficients have stochastic distributions. This paper presents an investigation of the stochastic distributions of the ACOF of quarry tiles under dry, water and glycerol conditions. One hundred friction measurements were performed on a walkway under the surface conditions of dry, water and 45% glycerol concentration. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov goodness-of-fit …test was used to determine if the distribution of the ACOF was a good fit with the normal, log-normal and Weibull distributions. The results indicated that the ACOF appears to fit the normal and log-normal distributions better than the Weibull distribution for the water and glycerol conditions. However, no match was found between the distribution of ACOF under the dry condition and any of the three continuous distributions evaluated. Based on limited data, a normal distribution might be more appropriate due to its simplicity, practicality and familiarity among the three distributions evaluated. Show more
Keywords: Available coefficient of friction, footwear and floor interface, stochastic distribution
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-2012-0608-3363
Citation: Work, vol. 41, no. Supplement 1, pp. 3363-3366, 2012
Authors: Andres, Robert O. | Wade, Chip
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: This is a review of walking tasks in the railroad environment, and the injuries that result from slips, trips, falls, or other acute or even non-traumatic exposures. The lack of federal regulations for railroad walkways has led several states to develop and enforce their own regulations. Support from the research literature for such regulations has come from biomechanical studies of the effects of walking on railroad ballast, which will be reviewed.
Keywords: Railroads, ballast, falls, biomechanics, balance
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-2012-0609-3367
Citation: Work, vol. 41, no. Supplement 1, pp. 3367-3371, 2012
Authors: Long, Jennifer | Long, Airdrie
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Ergonomics is a holistic discipline encompassing a wide range of special interest groups. The role of an ergonomics consultant is to provide integrated solutions to improve comfort, safety and productivity. In Australia, there are two types of consultants – generalists and specialists. Both have training in ergonomics but specialist knowledge may be the result of previous education or work experience. This paper presents three projects illustrating generalist and specialist (visual ergonomics) consultancy: development of a vision screening protocol, solving visual discomfort in an office environment and solving postural discomfort in heavy industry. These case studies demonstrate how multiple ergonomics consultants …may work together to solve ergonomics problems. It also describes some of the challenges for consultants, for those engaging their services and for the ergonomics profession, e.g. recognizing the boundaries of expertise, sharing information with business competitors, the costs-benefits of engaging multiple consultants and the risk of fragmentation of ergonomics knowledge and solutions. Since ergonomics problems are often multifaceted, ergonomics consultants should have a solid grounding in all domains of ergonomics, even if they ultimately only practice in one specialty or domain. This will benefit the profession and ensure that ergonomics remains a holistic discipline. Show more
Keywords: Professionalism, business, expertise, vision, problem-solving
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-2012-0610-3372
Citation: Work, vol. 41, no. Supplement 1, pp. 3372-3378, 2012
Authors: Richter, Hans O. | Camilla, Lodin | Forsman, Mikael
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: In an experimental study two levels of oculomotor load were induced via optical trial lenses. Trapezius muscle activity was measured with bipolar surface electromyography and normalized to a submaximal contraction. Sixty-six subjects with a median age of 36 (range 19–47, std 8) viewed a black and white Gabor grating (5 c/deg) for two 7-min periods monocularly through a 0 D lens or binocularly through -3.5 D lenses. The effect of time was separately regressed to EMG in two different subgroups of responders: a High-Oculomotor-Load (HOL) and a Low-Oculomotor-Load (LOL) group. A linear regression model was fitted on group level with …exposure time on the x-axis and normalized trapezius muscle EMG (%RVE) on the y-axis. The slope coefficient was significantly positive in the -D blur condition for only the HOL subgroup of responders: 0.926 + Timemin 1-7 × 0.088 (p = 0.002, r2 =0.865). There was no obvious sign of this activity to level off or to stabilize. These results suggest that professional information technology users that are exposed to a high level of oculomotor load, during extended times, are at an increased risk of exhibiting an increased trap.m. activity. Show more
Keywords: Accommodation, Computer work, EMG recordings, Eye movements, Motor control, Near work
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-2012-0611-3379
Citation: Work, vol. 41, no. Supplement 1, pp. 3379-3384, 2012
Authors: Horgen, Gunnar | Eilertsen, Grethe | Falkenberg, Helle
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: A functionally optimized housing development designed to meet the demands in different phases of living (universal design) may result in the elderly living longer in their own homes. In this study a total of 165 healthy persons were included out of a total of approximately 320 persons turning 75 years of age in 2009 living in Drammen municipality. They went through a quantitative, questionnaire-based interview (including VAS and SF-36) and 20 participants were then selected for a qualitative in depth interview. The lighting conditions in the kitchen, living room, bathroom, bedroom and staircase were measured according to a simplified procedure. …The overall lighting conditions were evaluated to be rather low, with means between 35 and 121 Lux, but the quantitative interviews showed that on most questions the scores were rather low, indicating that the overall thriving is good regardless of rather low lighting values. Show more
Keywords: Lighting, housing, ageing, thriving
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-2012-0612-3385
Citation: Work, vol. 41, no. Supplement 1, pp. 3385-3387, 2012
Authors: Lodin, Camilla | Forsman, Mikael | Richter, Hans
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Frequent use of digital information technology has an impact on eye- and neck/shoulder-discomfort. Studies with cross sectional and intervention design indicate an association between the two symptom categories. Still, whether visually demanding near work, per se, contributes to increased neck/shoulder discomfort remains a question of debate. The aim of this laboratory study was to assess if visually demanding experimental near work affects eye- and neck/shoulder-discomfort when the posture was adjusted for comfort and no movements were allowed. Thirty-three healthy subjects performed a visually demanding computer screen task (viewing task) under four different optical lens conditions: binocular -3.5 D and monocular …-3.5 D, +3.5 D and ±0 D. During the experiment subjects were seated in an office chair (with neck support) that was individually adjusted for comfort. At baseline and after each viewing task, subjects reported their perceived eye- and neck/shoulderdiscomfort on Borg’s CR-10 scale. Results show a significant increase of eye discomfort between baseline and the first viewing task, and a significant increase in neck/shoulder discomfort from baseline throughout the first three viewing tasks. Further analysis is required to determent whether the neck/shoulder discomfort was induced by the demanding near work or the static posture, or a combination. Show more
Keywords: Vision ergonomics, computer vision syndrome, eye strain, neck pain, Video Display Unit (VDU) users
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-2012-0613-3388
Citation: Work, vol. 41, no. Supplement 1, pp. 3388-3392, 2012
Authors: Forsman, Mikael | Lodin, Camilla | Richter, Hans
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Visual strain and discomfort may contribute to the generation of work-related musculoskeletal disorders among e.g. computer workers. A positive correlation on a group level between eye-lens accommodation and trapezius muscle activity has been reported. In this study we investigated the possibility of a direct, fast, connection between lens accommodation and trapezius muscles activity. The subjects focused alternately on Near and Far targets, with a mean switch time of 5 s, through four different lenses. The cross-correlation, R(tau) was computed, between the time signals of accommodation and electromyography (EMG) from 23 subjects. In the overall mean R(tau) of 736 curves, a …small but significant correlation peak (0.019) with a delay (of the EMG signal) of about 0.3 s, revealed a small common component in the two signals. Among the lenses, the positive lens (3.5 D), showed the highest correlation peak (0.040). The correlation may be caused by a direct “hard-wired” connection between the ciliary and trapezius muscles. But it could also be caused indirectly by the subject’s need for a more stable head in a more demanding visual task. The latter is supported by the result that the correlation was the highest in the positive lens condition. The present correlation is however weak and it has probably a low practical importance. Show more
Keywords: Visual discomfort, cross-correlation, electromyography, visual strain, ciliary muscle
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-2012-0614-3393
Citation: Work, vol. 41, no. Supplement 1, pp. 3393-3397, 2012
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