OFR-39(6)-82 Experiments Of Personal Equipment For Low Seam Coal Mines: V. Effect Of Reflectorized Outer Garments On Detection And Conspicuity Of Miners

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Barry Beith
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
43
File Size:
6628 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1980

Abstract

This report details a study which was designed to assess the effect of retroreflective material on detection and form recognition of workers in the mining environment. Further, the study attempted to determine an optimal configuration of retroreflective material with respect to amount and placement on the body to facilitate detection and form recognition. The study involved a one-fifth scale simulation of the perceptual task found in the underground low seam coal mine. Four different configurations of reflective material were presented in various body positions, common to low coal miners, at three different locations in the visual field, i.e., 10, 25, and 45 degrees from focal line-of-sight. All reflective configurations significantly improve detection and form recognition over configuration (cap only) worn by miners. As the amount of reflective material increased, accuracy also tended to increase. Based on the configurations investigated by this study, the Armband configuration (i.e., refectorized armbands, belt, self-rescuer and battery pack) was determined to be optimum. It is recommended that an actual field evaluation be made using the Armband configuration to establish if simulator results are generalizable to the underground mining environment.
Citation

APA: Barry Beith  (1980)  OFR-39(6)-82 Experiments Of Personal Equipment For Low Seam Coal Mines: V. Effect Of Reflectorized Outer Garments On Detection And Conspicuity Of Miners

MLA: Barry Beith OFR-39(6)-82 Experiments Of Personal Equipment For Low Seam Coal Mines: V. Effect Of Reflectorized Outer Garments On Detection And Conspicuity Of Miners. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1980.

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