Volume 93, Issue 9 pp. 47-57

Methods of collection of biological information for fatigue evaluation during visual display terminals (VDTs) operation

Yuriko Hachiya

Yuriko Hachiya

Waseda University/University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Japan

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Harutoshi Ogai

Harutoshi Ogai

Waseda University, Japan

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Hiroko Okazaki

Hiroko Okazaki

Kyushu Medical Institute for Occupational Health, Japan

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Takeshi Fujisaki

Takeshi Fujisaki

University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Japan

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Kazuhiko Uchida

Kazuhiko Uchida

University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Japan

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Susumu Oda

Susumu Oda

Fukuoka Occupational Health Promotion Center, Japan

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Futoshi Wada

Futoshi Wada

University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Japan

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Koji Mori

Koji Mori

University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Japan

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First published: 24 August 2010
Citations: 2

Abstract

A method for the analysis of fatigue parameters has been rarely researched in VDT operation. Up to now, fatigue was evaluated by changing of biological information. If signals regarding fatigue are detected, fatigue can be measured. The purpose of this study was an experiment and analysis method to extract parameters related to fatigue from the biological information during VDT operation using Independent Component Analysis (ICA). The experiment had 11 subjects, and examined light-load and heavy-load VDT operation. Measurement items were amount of work, number of mistakes, subjective symptoms, surface skin temperature (forehead and apex nasi), heart rate, skin blood flow of forearm, and respiratory rate. In the heavy-load operation group, number of mistakes and subjective symptom score were increased. Two-factor ANOVA was used for analysis. The result of number of mistakes was confirmed for the heavy load. After the moving averages of waveform were calculated, we extracted independent components by using ICA. The results of ICA suggest that the independent components increase according to accumulation of fatigue. Thus, the independent components would be a possible parameter of fatigue. However, further experiments should continue in order to obtain conclusive findings of our research. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Electron Comm Jpn, 93(9): 47–57, 2010; Published online in Wiley Online Library (wileyonlinelibrary.com). DOI 10.1002/ecj.10033

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