Body Sway as a Possible Indicator of Fatigue in Clerical Workers

Background: Fatigue has a strong impact on workers' performance and safety, but expedient methods for assessing fatigue on the job are not yet available. Studies discuss posturography as an indicator of fatigue, but further evidence for its use in the workplace is needed. The purpose of the stu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ina Völker, Christine Kirchner, Otmar Leo Bock, Edmund Wascher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-09-01
Series:Safety and Health at Work
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791115000335
id doaj-d9b41e00519f480b8513dd51ad87eba7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d9b41e00519f480b8513dd51ad87eba72020-11-24T21:01:42ZengElsevierSafety and Health at Work2093-79112015-09-016320621010.1016/j.shaw.2015.04.003Body Sway as a Possible Indicator of Fatigue in Clerical WorkersIna Völker0Christine Kirchner1Otmar Leo Bock2Edmund Wascher3German Sport University Cologne—Institute of Physiology and Anatomy, Cologne, GermanyGerman Sport University Cologne—Institute of Physiology and Anatomy, Cologne, GermanyGerman Sport University Cologne—Institute of Physiology and Anatomy, Cologne, GermanyIfADo—Leibniz Research Centre for Working Environment and Human Factors, Dortmund, GermanyBackground: Fatigue has a strong impact on workers' performance and safety, but expedient methods for assessing fatigue on the job are not yet available. Studies discuss posturography as an indicator of fatigue, but further evidence for its use in the workplace is needed. The purpose of the study is to examine whether posturography is a suitable indicator of fatigue in clerical workers. Methods: Thirty-six employees (Ø 34.8 years, standard deviation = 12.5) participated in postural tasks (eyes open, eyes closed, arm swinging, and dual task) in the morning and afternoon. Position of their center of pressure (COP) was registered using a Nintendo Wii Balance Board and commercial software. From registered COP time series, we calculated the following parameters: path length (mm), velocity (mm/s), anterior–posterior variance (mm), mediolateral variance (mm), and confidence area (mm2). These parameters were reduced to two orthogonal factors in a factor analysis with varimax rotation. Results: Statistical analysis of the first factor (path length and velocity) showed a significant effect of time of day: COP moved along a shorter path at a lower velocity in the afternoon compared with that in the morning. There also was a significant effect of task, but no significant interaction. Conclusion: Data suggest that postural stability of clerical workers was comparable in the morning and afternoon, but COP movement was greater in the morning. Within the framework of dynamic systems theory, this could indicate that the postural system explored the state space in more detail, and thus was more ready to respond to unexpected perturbations in the morning.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791115000335fatigueposturographyworkplace
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ina Völker
Christine Kirchner
Otmar Leo Bock
Edmund Wascher
spellingShingle Ina Völker
Christine Kirchner
Otmar Leo Bock
Edmund Wascher
Body Sway as a Possible Indicator of Fatigue in Clerical Workers
Safety and Health at Work
fatigue
posturography
workplace
author_facet Ina Völker
Christine Kirchner
Otmar Leo Bock
Edmund Wascher
author_sort Ina Völker
title Body Sway as a Possible Indicator of Fatigue in Clerical Workers
title_short Body Sway as a Possible Indicator of Fatigue in Clerical Workers
title_full Body Sway as a Possible Indicator of Fatigue in Clerical Workers
title_fullStr Body Sway as a Possible Indicator of Fatigue in Clerical Workers
title_full_unstemmed Body Sway as a Possible Indicator of Fatigue in Clerical Workers
title_sort body sway as a possible indicator of fatigue in clerical workers
publisher Elsevier
series Safety and Health at Work
issn 2093-7911
publishDate 2015-09-01
description Background: Fatigue has a strong impact on workers' performance and safety, but expedient methods for assessing fatigue on the job are not yet available. Studies discuss posturography as an indicator of fatigue, but further evidence for its use in the workplace is needed. The purpose of the study is to examine whether posturography is a suitable indicator of fatigue in clerical workers. Methods: Thirty-six employees (Ø 34.8 years, standard deviation = 12.5) participated in postural tasks (eyes open, eyes closed, arm swinging, and dual task) in the morning and afternoon. Position of their center of pressure (COP) was registered using a Nintendo Wii Balance Board and commercial software. From registered COP time series, we calculated the following parameters: path length (mm), velocity (mm/s), anterior–posterior variance (mm), mediolateral variance (mm), and confidence area (mm2). These parameters were reduced to two orthogonal factors in a factor analysis with varimax rotation. Results: Statistical analysis of the first factor (path length and velocity) showed a significant effect of time of day: COP moved along a shorter path at a lower velocity in the afternoon compared with that in the morning. There also was a significant effect of task, but no significant interaction. Conclusion: Data suggest that postural stability of clerical workers was comparable in the morning and afternoon, but COP movement was greater in the morning. Within the framework of dynamic systems theory, this could indicate that the postural system explored the state space in more detail, and thus was more ready to respond to unexpected perturbations in the morning.
topic fatigue
posturography
workplace
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791115000335
work_keys_str_mv AT inavolker bodyswayasapossibleindicatoroffatigueinclericalworkers
AT christinekirchner bodyswayasapossibleindicatoroffatigueinclericalworkers
AT otmarleobock bodyswayasapossibleindicatoroffatigueinclericalworkers
AT edmundwascher bodyswayasapossibleindicatoroffatigueinclericalworkers
_version_ 1716777129132163072