From Theory to Practice: How Designing for Situation Awareness can Transform Confusing, Overloaded Shovel Operator Interfaces, Reduce Costs, and Increase Safety

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
E. Onal
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
9
File Size:
1602 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 1, 2013

Abstract

Mining operators are faced with complex information delivered by technology-centric rather than user-centric systems. The ability to achieve high situation awareness (SA) in the face of this data overload is a key challenge for effective decision making and information exploitation. Incidents that result in loss of revenue and even life, and compromise safety that are attributed to human error are often the result of system designs that overload human cognitive capabilities. This paper focuses on defining SA as it relates to mining operations and presents methods for improving SA through a scientific approach for electric shovel operator user interface development.
Citation

APA: E. Onal  (2013)  From Theory to Practice: How Designing for Situation Awareness can Transform Confusing, Overloaded Shovel Operator Interfaces, Reduce Costs, and Increase Safety

MLA: E. Onal From Theory to Practice: How Designing for Situation Awareness can Transform Confusing, Overloaded Shovel Operator Interfaces, Reduce Costs, and Increase Safety. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2013.

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