Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
549420 Applied Ergonomics 2012 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Musculoskeletal disorder risk was assessed during automotive assembly processes. The risk associated with current assembly processes was compared to using a cantilever chair intervention. Spine loads and normalized shoulder muscle activity were evaluated during assembly in eight regions of the vehicle. Eight interior cabin regions of the vehicle were classified by reach distance, height from vehicle floor and front to back. The cantilever chair intervention tool was most effective in the far reach regions regardless of the height. In the front far reach regions both spine loads and normalized shoulder muscle activity levels were reduced. In the middle and close reach regions spine loads were reduced, however, shoulder muscle activity was not, thus an additional intervention would be necessary to reduce shoulder risk. In the back far reach region, spine loads were not significantly different between the current and cantilever chair conditions. Thus, the effectiveness of the cantilever chair was dependent on the region of the vehicle.

► The study measured spine loads and shoulder muscle activity in two automobile assembly conditions. ► The current automobile assembly condition was compared to using a cantilever chair intervention. ► Eight regions of the vehicle were classified based on reach distance, height and front/back. ► The cantilever chair condition reduced exposure in far reach regions regardless of height.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Human-Computer Interaction
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