There are several risk factors to be mindful at
workstations either office or factories where we can
find systems of human-machine interaction for long
hours of work shifts. This way, taking no importance
on ergonomics can derive to several problems and
injuries on users, such as Musculoskeletal disorders
(MSD) which are injuries or disorders of the muscles,
nerves, tendons, joints, cartilage, and spinal discs.
Work-related musculoskeletal disorders (WMSD) are
conditions in which the work environment and
performance of work contribute significantly to that
condition.
Just in Mexico, WMSD has been reported as the
third cause for years lived in disability, and the
seventeenth cause of years of life lost (Clark et al.,
2018). Additionally, good ergonomics can improve
safety and comfort, and so they can lead to increasing
the productivity of workers (Zagloel et al., 2015).
Ergonomics aims to ensure that human needs for
safe and efficient working are met in the design of
work systems, this ability of people to do their jobs is
influenced by both physical design and job content.
Design students usually underestimate the needs of
good ergonomics and anthropometric design until
they create their first physical prototype, as they care
more about aesthetics and functionality (Dias et al.,
2015). Engineering students are even less likely to
think about these topics. Through this paper, we
present an innovative way to present Ergonomics and
Anthropometric Design to engineering students, with
a theoretical approach supported by a practical
approach in an industrial context and involving
technologies.
This article is organized as follows: Section 2
presents a background in the study of ergonomics and
anthropometric design as it is taught to Industrial
Designers at the faculty and some proposals from
different authors that involve the use of technology.
Section 3 introduces the context of teaching these
topics for Mechatronic Engineers and details the
learning experience that was designed. Section 4
presents the validation of this instructional design
learning strategy and Section 5 opens the
conversation for future work.
2 BACKGROUND
Human has been aware of the relation between their
body and the objects around them since prehistoric
times. For example, the length of the first arrows was
designed for maximum reach in the drawing of the
bow. Egyptians built chairs, ventilated beds and
seaworthy boats just by referencing it multiple times
to the cubit (i.e. elbow to the tip of the middle finger).
The arrival of the machines during the past 200
years brought an early modern period in which the
operator’s needs come last. The first machine designs
were thought to be used by a certain population size.
When operators of those specific dimensions became
scarce, the concept of human engineering (a term
coined by the United States Army) began by
analyzing the workspace to accept a variable
population.
Before World War II, engineers and architects had
some physical guidelines based on the average man.
The Department of Agriculture was in charge of
taking these measurements but this was not always
accurate for human engineering. It was until World
War II, under the statement that machines win wars
and the fact that they were becoming more complex,
that the relation between human-machine acquired
importance.
In Britain, the field of ergonomics was born after
World War II, and the name was invented by Murrell
in 1949, despite objections that people would confuse
it with economics. The emphasis was on equipment
and workspace design and the relevant subjects were
held to be anatomy, physiology, industrial medicine,
design, architecture, and illumination engineering. In
the United States, a similar discipline emerged,
known as human factors, but its scientific roots were
grounded in psychology (Mondelo et al., 2001).
The word “anthropometry” comes from the Greek
words Anthropos (man) and metron (measure).
Anthropometric data is used in ergonomics to specify
the physical dimensions of workspaces, equipment,
furniture, and clothing so as to “fit the task to the
man” (Grandjean, 1973) and to avoid physical
mismatches between the dimensions of equipment
and products, and the corresponding user dimensions.
According to Pheasant (1996), anthropometry
historical antecedents date back to the Renaissance.
However is well known that this discipline emerged
during the nineteenth century and, among other
aspects, focuses on physical differences between
people of different ethnics origins (Tilley & Henry
Dreyfuss Associates, 2002). In order to perform such
comparisons, it was essential to develop measurement
techniques to obtain data from individuals, and
statistical methods to process that data. The data can
be used only to assess individuals from the same
population from which they were sampled, and can be
categorized in different ways:
Structural anthropometric data contains all
measurements of the bodily dimensions of subject in
static positions. Measurements are made from one