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Journal Article

Citation

Bellanca JL, Swanson LR, Helton J, McNinch M. Min. Metall. Explor. 2019; 36(4): 647-655.

Affiliation

Spokane Mining Research Division, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Spokane, WA, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s42461-018-0045-3

PMID

30984912

Abstract

Accident data indicates that mobile haulage poses a significant pinning, crushing, and striking risk. Proximity detection systems (PDSs) have the potential to protect mineworkers from these risks. However, unintended consequences of mobile PDSs can undermine the safety benefit they provide. Soliciting iterative user input can improve the design process. Users help provide a critical understanding of how mobile PDSs may hinder normal operation and endanger mineworkers. Researchers explored users' perspectives by conducting interviews with mineworkers from seven mines that have installed mobile PDSs on some of their haulage equipment. Mineworkers reported that mobile PDSs affect loading, tramming, section setup, maintenance, and general work on the section. Mineworkers discussed the operational effects and increased burden, exposure, and risk. Mineworkers also suggested that improved task compatibility, training, logistics, and PDS performance might help address some of these identified issues. This paper also gives additional insights into mobile PDS design and implementation.


Language: en

Keywords

Mining; Proximity detection; Task compatibility; Unintended consequences; Usability

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