Psyc 552 Ergonomics & Biomechanics Lecture 12. Psychophysics  A study of the relationship between the physical qualities of a stimulus and the perception.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
NIOSH Lifting Equation submitted by William A. Groves
Advertisements

Exercise physiology Objective:To know and understand the physiological effects of physical loading and exercise and measurement of physical condition and.
Exercise Science Exercise Testing. Why Perform Exercise Testing? Why Perform Exercise Testing? Assess current levels Assess current levels Aid in prescription.
Psychophysics 4 Research Methods Fall 2010 Tamás Bőhm.
Scaling. Scaling seeks to discover how varying the physical parameters of the stimulus affects the psychological parameters. In general, scaling is concerned.
Performing An Ergonomics Review. Why should I perform an ergonomics review? What is the function of an ergonomics review? How do I apply the steps involved.
Eduardo J Salazar-Vega MHP CPH.  Ergo = work  Nomos = laws  It is an applied scientific/engineering discipline concerned with the interaction among.
cardiorespiratory endurance
Physical fitness.
TBT 05: Manual Handling LIFTING / LOWERING / CARRYING/ THROWING / PUSHING / PULLING / REPETITIVE TASKS 1.MSD: Musculo-Skeletal Disorder 2.ULD: Upper Limb.
International Module W506 Ergonomic Essentials Day 3.
Training 101 Triad Triathlon Team October 10 th, 2014.
Thresholds, Weber’s law, Fechner’s three methods Research Methods Fall 2010 Tamás Bőhm.
Sketch courtesy from Riekes Material Handling. Occupational MH tasks Occupational material handling (MH) can be classified into three broad types: –Pulling/Pushing.
Calculating Intensities
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Psyc 552 Ergonomics & Biomechanics Lecture 14. Evaluating Lifting with NIOSH  National Institute of Occupational Health & Safety.  Created Lifting Equation.
Rob van der Willigen designed by Stephanie Thái.
Sketch courtesy from Riekes Material Handling. Severity of the problem Manual handling (lifting) is injury prone & expensive –BLS 2007: 140,330 out of.
Psyc 552 Ergonomics & Biomechanics Lecture 7. Muscle Strength  Maximum voluntary exertion levels The maximum force that a muscle can produce under prescribed.
The Perception of Correlation in Scatterplots Ronald A. Rensink Departments of Computer Science and Psychology University of British Columbia Vancouver,
ERGONOMICS :: TRAIN-THE-TRAINER PROGRAM :: TASK ANALYSIS TOOLS Task Analysis Tools.
AUTOMOTIVE HIGH SCHOOL PHYSICAL EDUCATION DEPARTMENT WELCOME TO OUR STAFF PROFESIONAL DEVELOPMENT FITNESS CARDIOVASCULAR PROGRAM PRESENTATION BY Mr.
1 Analysis of Manual Work Objectives –Review traditional job analysis methods –Introduce ergonomic job analysis methods for identifying potential for worker.
Kin 381a Assignment #2: Self-Talk Assignment. Purpose Examined relationship b/w three dimensions of ST (valence, direction and frequency) and effort,
Ergonomic Tests Amy, Jayme, Dan, Keri, Will. RMA Maximum Isoinertial Testing – Lifting, Carrying, Pushing and Pulling.
©Thompson Educational Publishing, Inc All material is copyright protected. It is illegal to copy any of this material. This material may be used.
Applied Psychoacoustics Lecture 4: Loudness Jonas Braasch.
EXERCISE PRINCIPLES “FIT” PRICIPLE: F = Frequency: how often the exercise is performed I = Intensity: how hard the exercise is performed T = Time: how.
NASH PHYSICAL EDUCATION
PHYSICAL CONDITIONING. Understand the effects of conditioning on athletes How to condition athletes for judo Focus on this module: is on energy production.
Elements of Fitness  1. Cardiorespiratory Endurance- allow body to last during extended exercise Heart, lungs and blood vessels send fuel and Oxygen.
February 25, 2008 Post-Offer/Pre- Employment Testing Programs Dr. Greg Schroeder, DPT Work Injury Prevention Consultant.
Calculating workload intensities
1 Work Load and Pre Employment Astrand ch. 13 p Gallagher and Moore - Occupational Ergonomics Handbook Ch 21 p Jackson p53, Assessment.
Higher PE Preparation of the Body Lesson 7 Tuesday 7 th September.
Sensation and Perception Sensory input and Psychophysics.
Sensation and Perception - psychophysics.ppt © 2001 Laura Snodgrass, Ph.D. Psychophysics Outline Classical Psychophysics –definition –psychometric function.
Fundamentals of Sensation and Perception EXPLORING PERCEPTION BY STUDYING BEHAVIOUR ERIK CHEVRIER SEPTEMBER 16 TH, 2015.
Psychophysics and Psychoacoustics
Components of Fitness Represents how fit the body is as a whole.
Handtool design The human hand is able to perform a large variety of activities, ranging from those that require fine control to others that demand large.
Psych 480: Fundamentals of Perception and Sensation
Scaling Perceived Exertion
Key Components of Strength and Conditioning Programs
1 Muscular Function Assessment Gallagher - OEH ch 21(CCW)
Response Processes Psych DeShon. Response Elicitation Completion Completion Requires production Requires production Allows for creative responses.
تهیه کننده : دکتر مسعود مطلبی
1 ISE Manual handling is associated with 27% of all industrial injuries 670,000 injuries/yr in the United States 60% of all money spent on industrial.
ISE 311 – 03/04 1 Anatomy “The build of the human body” ‘Subassemblies’ of interest in ergonomics –spine structure – figures potential injuries.
5 Components of FITNESS Muscular Strength – the most weight you can lift or the most force you can exert at 1 time Muscular Endurance - The ability of.
Designing a Training Program Training Dosages The quantity of work to be performed in a training session must be in accordance with: the individual abilities,the.
Manual Handling Presented by Occupational Health.
1. 2 What You Will Do List the components of exercise prescription. Describe the overload principle and how it applies to a fitness program. Apply the.
FITT F = Frequency – How often (How many days per week) I = Intensity – How hard (Target Heart Rate or weight) T = Time – How long (How many minutes) T.
IE 366 Chapter 13 Manual Handling. IE 366 Overview ● Background ● Manual handling variables ● Pushing and pulling ● Holding, Carrying ● NIOSH Lifting.
Sensation & Perception
Aerobic Endurance Exercise Training
How to calculate workload intensities (Borg scale, Karvonen method)
Sensation and Perception
Health Related Fitness
PHED 1 Applied Physiology Q7 – Measuring Intensities
PRINCIPLES OF TRAINING
Section 2 Planning Your Fitness Program
Fundamentals of Physical Fitness & Muscle Fitness
cardiorespiratory endurance
What You Will Do List the components of exercise prescription.
Correlation & Trend Lines
Principles of perception
Presentation transcript:

Psyc 552 Ergonomics & Biomechanics Lecture 12

Psychophysics  A study of the relationship between the physical qualities of a stimulus and the perception of those qualities.  Weber’s Law (circa 1800) – showed the relationship between the stimulus and the sensation can be defined by a constant.

Weber’s Law  I = …  ∆ I = …  K = Constant

Fechner’s Law & Steven’s Power Law  Related the strength of a sensation to k and the intensity of the physical stimulus. S = k log I  Steven’s modified Fechner’s Law to read: S = Ki n

Psychophysics and work  Psychophysical criteria Are correlated with physiological methods Are correlated with some injury measures  The goal of work psychophysics…

Limits  Traditional psychophysical methods required people to make judgments based upon a standard.  Different people picked different standards.  The response were…

The Borg scale  Used categories rather than ratios.  He used a variety of verbally anchored scales that had good inter-rater reliability.

Borg Scale  The first Borg scales used the following anchors. 3 – extremely light 5 – very light 7 – light 9 – rather light 11 – neither light nor laborious 13 – rather laborious 15 – laborious 17 – very laborious 19 – extremely laborious

Ratings of Perceived Exertion (RPE)  6  7 – very, very, light  8  9 – very light  10  11 – fairly light  12  13 – somewhat hard  14  15 – hard  16  17 – very hard  18  19 – very, very hard  20

Category Ratio Scale  0 – nothing at all .5 – very, very weak  1 – very weak  2 – weak  3 – moderate  4 – somewhat strong  5 – strong  6  7 – very strong  8  9  10 – very, very strong  Maximal

Visual Analog Scale (VAS) Easiest Imaginable Work Hardest Imaginable Work 10 cm line

Visual Analog Scale (VAS) Best Class Imaginable Best Class Imaginable 10 cm line

Visual Analog Scale (VAS) Best Instructor Imaginable 10 cm line Best Instructor Imaginable

Preferred Maximums  A manual material handling task can vary in Weight Size Frequency Distance  We can instruct people to work keeping all variables but one constant  Other instructions include…

Correlations  Physiological measures (e.g., heart rate, O2 consumption) are well correlated with activities of the larger muscle groups in the lower body.  They are not well correlated…

Psychometric Qualities  Scales…  Manual material handling…

Psychometric Qualities (cont)  Upper body work…  Preferred maximums…

Ergonomic Applications  Snook – Use of psychophysical guidelines can reduce work related back injuries by 1/3 rd  Matching work to individual perceptions of exertion can reduce over exertion injuries.  In the absence of specific biomechanical or physiological models or guidelines, psychophysical methods might be the best, or only, method of evaluating work.

Work variables  Weight – As weight increases, so to does perceived exertion.  With repetitive lifting, the preferred maximum might be only 1/5 th of an individuals maximum lifting ability.

Work variables (cont)  Frequency – as the frequency of lifts increase, so to does the perception of exertion.  Increasing frequency increase the energy expenditure to perform the work.

Work variables (cont)  Distance Vertical distance -- lift distance Horizontal distance – knuckle height from floor Push / pull distance