Crane cabins’ interior space multivariate anthropometric modeling
Апстракт
Background: Previous research has shown that today's crane cabins fail to meet the needs of a large proportion of operators. Performance and financial losses and effects on safety should not be overlooked as well.
Objective: The first aim of this survey is to model the crane cabin interior space using up-to-date crane operator anthropometric data and to compare the multivariate and univariate method anthropometric models. The second aim of the paper is to define the crane cabin interior space dimensions that enable anthropometric convenience.
Methods: To facilitate the cabin design, the anthropometric dimensions of 64 crane operators in the first sample and 19 more in the second sample were collected in Serbia. The multivariate anthropometric models, spanning 95% of the population on the basis of a set of 8 anthropometric dimensions, have been developed. The percentile method was also used on the same set of data.
Results: The dimensions of the interior space, necessary for th...e accommodation of the crane operator, are 1174×1080×1865 mm. The percentiles results for the 5th and 95th model are within the obtained dimensions.
Conclusions: The results of this study may prove useful to crane cabin designers in eliminating anthropometric inconsistencies and improving the health of operators, but can also aid in improving the safety, performance and financial results of the companies where crane cabins operate.
Кључне речи:
crane operator / percentiles / principal components analysisИзвор:
Work: A Journal of Prevention, Assessment & Rehabilitation, 2018, 59, 4, 557-570
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-182706
ISSN: 1051-9815
WoS: 000431142300008
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85048363494
Колекције
Институција/група
Mašinski fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Essdai, Ahmed AU - Spasojević Brkić, Vesna AU - Golubović, Tamara AU - Brkić, Aleksandar AU - Popović, Vladimir PY - 2018 UR - https://machinery.mas.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4070 AB - Background: Previous research has shown that today's crane cabins fail to meet the needs of a large proportion of operators. Performance and financial losses and effects on safety should not be overlooked as well. Objective: The first aim of this survey is to model the crane cabin interior space using up-to-date crane operator anthropometric data and to compare the multivariate and univariate method anthropometric models. The second aim of the paper is to define the crane cabin interior space dimensions that enable anthropometric convenience. Methods: To facilitate the cabin design, the anthropometric dimensions of 64 crane operators in the first sample and 19 more in the second sample were collected in Serbia. The multivariate anthropometric models, spanning 95% of the population on the basis of a set of 8 anthropometric dimensions, have been developed. The percentile method was also used on the same set of data. Results: The dimensions of the interior space, necessary for the accommodation of the crane operator, are 1174×1080×1865 mm. The percentiles results for the 5th and 95th model are within the obtained dimensions. Conclusions: The results of this study may prove useful to crane cabin designers in eliminating anthropometric inconsistencies and improving the health of operators, but can also aid in improving the safety, performance and financial results of the companies where crane cabins operate. T2 - Work: A Journal of Prevention, Assessment & Rehabilitation T1 - Crane cabins’ interior space multivariate anthropometric modeling EP - 570 IS - 4 SP - 557 VL - 59 DO - 10.3233/WOR-182706 ER -
@article{ author = "Essdai, Ahmed and Spasojević Brkić, Vesna and Golubović, Tamara and Brkić, Aleksandar and Popović, Vladimir", year = "2018", abstract = "Background: Previous research has shown that today's crane cabins fail to meet the needs of a large proportion of operators. Performance and financial losses and effects on safety should not be overlooked as well. Objective: The first aim of this survey is to model the crane cabin interior space using up-to-date crane operator anthropometric data and to compare the multivariate and univariate method anthropometric models. The second aim of the paper is to define the crane cabin interior space dimensions that enable anthropometric convenience. Methods: To facilitate the cabin design, the anthropometric dimensions of 64 crane operators in the first sample and 19 more in the second sample were collected in Serbia. The multivariate anthropometric models, spanning 95% of the population on the basis of a set of 8 anthropometric dimensions, have been developed. The percentile method was also used on the same set of data. Results: The dimensions of the interior space, necessary for the accommodation of the crane operator, are 1174×1080×1865 mm. The percentiles results for the 5th and 95th model are within the obtained dimensions. Conclusions: The results of this study may prove useful to crane cabin designers in eliminating anthropometric inconsistencies and improving the health of operators, but can also aid in improving the safety, performance and financial results of the companies where crane cabins operate.", journal = "Work: A Journal of Prevention, Assessment & Rehabilitation", title = "Crane cabins’ interior space multivariate anthropometric modeling", pages = "570-557", number = "4", volume = "59", doi = "10.3233/WOR-182706" }
Essdai, A., Spasojević Brkić, V., Golubović, T., Brkić, A.,& Popović, V.. (2018). Crane cabins’ interior space multivariate anthropometric modeling. in Work: A Journal of Prevention, Assessment & Rehabilitation, 59(4), 557-570. https://doi.org/10.3233/WOR-182706
Essdai A, Spasojević Brkić V, Golubović T, Brkić A, Popović V. Crane cabins’ interior space multivariate anthropometric modeling. in Work: A Journal of Prevention, Assessment & Rehabilitation. 2018;59(4):557-570. doi:10.3233/WOR-182706 .
Essdai, Ahmed, Spasojević Brkić, Vesna, Golubović, Tamara, Brkić, Aleksandar, Popović, Vladimir, "Crane cabins’ interior space multivariate anthropometric modeling" in Work: A Journal of Prevention, Assessment & Rehabilitation, 59, no. 4 (2018):557-570, https://doi.org/10.3233/WOR-182706 . .