Mining Feature: NIOSH Mining Brings Expertise to Washington
Wednesday, March 29, 2017
NIOSH Mining researchers Tim Orr, Will Helfrich, and Brendan Macdonald of the Technology Integration team within the Mining Program’s Human Factors Branch recently shared their technical expertise with fellow government workers who had developed an immersive, virtual reality-capable space.
The three researchers work extensively with the Virtual Immersion and Simulation Laboratory—better known as VISLab—at the NIOSH Pittsburgh Mining Research Division (PMRD) campus. The VISLab allows Mining Program behavioral scientists, trainers, and mine design engineers to examine how workers perceive threats in their workplaces, what design challenges might be seen in 3D images of actual work settings, and how individuals and groups choose to react in life-like emergency scenarios.
Through connections made in a technology working group, Orr got the word out about the VISLab’s capabilities. Because of these connections, Orr, Helfrich, and Macdonald were at the top of the list when the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) in Washington, D.C., needed help developing content for their own VR space similar to the VISLab’s 360-degree theater.
As HHS staff readied their new space, they needed example applications to show other HHS staff what their facility could handle. Several weeks ago, the three PMRD researchers were asked to bring their vast knowledge of VR to Washington in order to test out the new room. They uploaded multiple digital scenarios to the system and put the technology through its paces. By all accounts, the visit went well.
“We’re planning to develop an Intra-Agency Agreement that will allow us to share some resources, learn from each other, and help teach some other groups what we have learned,” Orr said.
The HHS system is regularly used for disaster planning, strategic response exercises, and data modeling.
See Also
- The Changing Organization of Work and the Safety and Health of Working People: Knowledge Gaps and Research Directions
- Emergency Escape and Refuge Alternatives
- Emergency Response Planning for Small Mines: Who Needs It?
- An Oral History Analysis of Mine Emergency Response
- Research and Evaluation Methods For Measuring Nonroutine Mine Health and Safety Skills: Bibliography
- Tell Me a Story: Using Stories to Improve Occupational Safety Training
- Tell Me a Story: Why Stories are Essential to Effective Safety Training
- Training for Safety in Emergencies Inoculating for Underground Coal Mine Emergencies
- Using the Internet to Train Emergency Command Center Personnel
- When Do You Take Refuge? Decisionmaking During Mine Emergency Escape
- Page last reviewed: 3/31/2017
- Page last updated: 3/29/2017
- Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Mining Program