Search results for "man-machine systems"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

Whole-body vibration and disorders of the spine

1987

This cross-sectional study is based on interviews and medical examinations of 352 operators of earth-moving machines who had been exposed to whole-body vibrations for at least three years. In addition, available X-rays showing different parts of the spines of 251 machine operators who had been exposed to vibration for at least ten years were used for evaluation. One hundred and forty-nine of the operators were asked about discomfort occurring immediately after an eight-hour work shift. The group of exposed persons was compared with a control group of 215 non-exposed persons. The percentage of subjects reporting spinal discomfort was much higher for the exposed group than for the non-exposed…

Adultmedicine.medical_specialtyRehabilitationCross-sectional studybusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthOccupational diseaseMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseVibrationOccupational DiseasesRadiographyCross-Sectional StudiesLumbarEpidemiologymedicinePhysical therapyEtiologyHumansWhole body vibrationSpinal DiseasesbusinessMan-Machine SystemsRachisInternational Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health
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Acceptance of truck platooning by professional drivers on German highways. A mixed methods approach.

2020

Abstract Truck platoon driving is a current branch of automated driving, which has the potential to radically change the work routine of professional drivers. In a platoon system, one truck (semi-)automatically follows a lead truck with a reduced distance, which produces significant savings in fuel and enables better traffic flow. In a current application of truck platoon driving, the following vehicle operates at level-2 automation. Thus, the driver of the following truck merely has to supervise the semi-automated system, which takes over steering and speed control when engaged. Level-2 truck platoon driving had not been tested with professional drivers in real traffic before. We hypothesi…

TruckAdultMaleAutomobile DrivingComputer sciencePhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationHuman Factors and ErgonomicsTransport engineering03 medical and health sciencesAutomationYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineSAFERGermanySurveys and QuestionnairesHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSafety Risk Reliability and QualityEngineering (miscellaneous)Man-Machine Systems050107 human factorsQualitative ResearchBehaviorbusiness.industryQualitative interviews05 social sciencesMiddle AgedTraffic flow030210 environmental & occupational healthAutomationDriving safetyMotor VehiclesWork (electrical)PlatoonbusinessApplied ergonomics
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Analysis of Somatosensory Cortical Responses to Different Electrotactile Stimulations as a Method Towards an Objective Definition of Artificial Senso…

2022

Sensory feedback is a critical component in many human-machine interfaces (e.g., bionic limbs) to provide missing sensations. Specifically, electrotactile stimulation is a popular feedback modality able to evoke configurable sensations by modulating pulse amplitude, duration, and frequency of the applied stimuli. However, these sensations coded by electrotactile parameters are thus far predominantly determined by subjective user reports, which leads to heterogeneous and unstable feedback delivery. Thus, a more objective understanding of the impact that different stimulation parameters induce in the brain, is needed. Analysis of cortical responses to electrotactile afference might be an effe…

magnetoencephalographyMEGbiologypalauteMagnetoencephalographyPilot ProjectsSomatosensory CortexFeedbackfrequency modulationkosketusaistiFeedback SensoryEvoked Potentials Somatosensoryihminen-konejärjestelmätHumansfingersspatiotemporal phenomenaman-machine systems
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User-oriented evaluation of mechanical single-channel axial pipettes.

2013

Hand tools should be designed so that they are comfortable to use, fit the hand and are user-oriented. Six different manual, single-channel axial pipettes were evaluated for such objective outcomes as muscular activity, wrist postures and efficiency, as well as for subjective outcomes concerning self-assessed features of pipette usability and musculoskeletal strain. Ten experienced laboratory employees volunteered for the study. The results showed that light and short pipettes with better tool comfort resulted in reduced muscular activity and perceived musculoskeletal strain when they were compared with a long and heavy pipette. There were no differences in the efficiency between the differ…

Wrist JointEngineeringCumulative Trauma DisordersSurface PropertiesPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationHuman Factors and ErgonomicsEfficiencyPersonal SatisfactionHand toolFingersIsometric ContractionTask Performance and AnalysisHumansUser orientedSafety Risk Reliability and QualityEngineering (miscellaneous)Man-Machine SystemsSimulationArthrometry Articularbusiness.industryClinical Laboratory TechniquesElectromyographyWork (physics)PipetteHand InjuriesUsabilityta3142Equipment DesignHandCumulative trauma disorderOccupational DiseasesForearmLaboratory PersonnelCross-Sectional StudiesAttitudeNew product developmentFemaleErgonomicsbusinessCommunication channelApplied ergonomics
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