Chapter
Nov 9, 2020
Construction Research Congress 2020

Virtual Reality Postural Training for Construction

Publication: Construction Research Congress 2020: Safety, Workforce, and Education

ABSTRACT

Currently, the U.S. construction workforce is aging faster than the next generation is being trained. While an insufficient workforce will cause major issues with the advancement of infrastructure, it also causes less discussed worker health safety hazards. Traditional experiential learning is a major limitation of the construction industry’s growth rate due to the non-availability of real environments, time, and training supervisors. Virtual reality (VR) allows for a virtual environment to efficiently mimic dangerous, expensive, and difficult to set up training scenarios. This paper presents an exploration of a virtual approach to training future construction workers. VR environments and a RGB camera based pose estimation pedagogical tool are evaluated for their ability to improve the training process of future construction workers. Study participants will be assessed on their ability to learn, identify, and assess health safety risks, specifically proper lifting and postural techniques associated with construction tasks. Findings of this work in progress will provide quantified learning gains by measuring training time, changes in behavior, and risk assessment ability; and a qualitative understanding of the experience in the virtual environment through participant interviews. Findings from this study transfer to a much-needed digitization of pedagogical approaches for blue collar industries.

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Information & Authors

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Published In

Go to Construction Research Congress 2020
Construction Research Congress 2020: Safety, Workforce, and Education
Pages: 565 - 573
Editors: Mounir El Asmar, Ph.D., Arizona State University, David Grau, Ph.D., Arizona State University, and Pingbo Tang, Ph.D., Arizona State University
ISBN (Online): 978-0-7844-8287-2

History

Published online: Nov 9, 2020
Published in print: Nov 9, 2020

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Authors

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Aanuoluwapo Ojelade [email protected]
Occupational Ergonomics and Safety, Dept. of Industrial and Systems Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA. E-mail: [email protected]
Frederick Paige [email protected]
Construction and Engineering Management, Dept. of Civil Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg VA. E-mail: [email protected]

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