Using experimental design to define boundary manikins
Journal article, 2012

When evaluating human-machine interaction it is central to consider anthropometric diversity to ensure intended accommodation levels. A well-known method is the use of boundary cases where manikins with extreme but likely measurement combinations are derived by mathematical treatment of anthropometric data. The supposition by that method is that the use of these manikins will facilitate accommodation of the expected part of the total, less extreme, population. In literature sources there are differences in how many and in what way these manikins should be defined. A similar field to the boundary case method is the use of experimental design in where relationships between affecting factors of a process is studied by a systematic approach. This paper examines the possibilities to adopt methodology used in experimental design to define a group of manikins. Different experimental designs were adopted to be used together with a confidence region and its axes. The result from the study shows that it is possible to adapt the methodology of experimental design when creating groups of manikins. The size of these groups of manikins depends heavily on the number of key measurements but also on the type of chosen experimental design.

Ergonomics simulation

Design of experiments

Confidence region

Digital

Author

Erik Bertilsson

Chalmers, Product and Production Development

D. Högberg

University of Skövde

Lars Hanson

Chalmers, Product and Production Development, Production Systems

Work

1051-9815 (ISSN)

Vol. 41 Supplement: 1 4598-4605

Subject Categories

Mechanical Engineering

Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

DOI

10.3233/WOR-2012-0075-4598

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Latest update

9/5/2024 7