A multimodal virtual reality set-up for human-centered design of industrial workstations
Abstract
Although the so-called Industry 4.0 trend is promoting
the increasing automation of processes in the factories
of the future, manual activities still play an extremely
important role within the factory and human factors greatly
affect the process performance. However, the analysis of
human-machine interaction and the prediction of human
performance in industry are difficult but crucial to have an
optimized design of workspaces and interfaces, reducing
time and cost of implementation, and avoiding late design
changes. This research adopts a multimodal human-centered
approach for the analysis of human-machine interaction,
and proposes a multimodal experimental set-up for the
evaluation of the workers’ experience to support the design of
industrial workstations. The set-up combines virtual mockups, interaction with both physical and virtual objects, and
monitoring sensors to track users and analyze their actions
and reactions. It allows creating a multimodal environment
able to deepen the interaction between humans and systems
or interfaces, to support design activities. Indeed, it has been
demonstrated that the analysis of the reactions of the users
involved, allows to evaluate the quality of the interaction,
identify the critical issues, define corrective actions, and
propose guidelines for system design or redesign [1]. The
paper describes the application of the proposed set-up on two
industrial case studies and reports the main results