从社会技术系统的角度比较两种粉尘控制技术的实施情况。

Mining engineering Pub Date : 2019-04-01
Emily J Haas, Andrew B Cecala, Jay F Colinet
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引用次数: 0

摘要

社会技术系统(STS)创建了一个框架,可以研究社会和技术因素如何在特定环境背景下影响组织成果。人们对 STS 进行了严格的研究,主要研究重点是工人与技术之间的互动。尽管这些互动非常重要,但在系统中引入任何技术或环境变化时都会发生的社会过程和互动却被低估了。如果能更好地理解社会过程,采矿组织就能有效地为这种变化做好准备并保持稳定。本着这一目标,我们试图通过应用元设计原则来分析两个案例研究干预措施的结果,从而扩展 STS 理论。具体来说,我们研究了一种不受管制的粉尘控制技术(头盔式粉尘监测仪)和一种受管制的粉尘控制技术(个人粉尘连续监测仪)对 STS 内各种因素的影响,包括员工对减少可吸入粉尘源的技术的了解、沟通和使用。研究结果的呈现方式首先涉及元设计 STS 的总体原则,包括组织参与、灵活性和沟通;其次,研究当组织遵守正式的、更高层次的要求时,技术实施过程有何不同。结果表明,在 STS 框架中突出社会因素,有助于减少技术方面的不可预测性,并可改善系统内的沟通,从而有助于缩短采用时间,尤其是在伴随新的正式工作流程时。
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Comparing the Implementation of Two Dust Control Technologies from a Sociotechnical Systems Perspective.

A sociotechnical system (STS) creates a framework that allows an examination of how social and technical factors affect organizational outcomes within a specific environmental context. STS has been rigorously studied with a primary research focus addressing worker-technology interactions. Although these interactions are important, the social processes and interactions that occur whenever any technical or environmental change is introduced into the system have been undervalued. If social processes are better understood, mining organizations could efficiently prepare and stabilize for such changes. With this goal in mind, we sought to extend STS theory through applying principles of meta-design to analyze the results of two case study interventions. Specifically, we studied the impact of an unregulated dust control technology (the Helmet-CAM) and a regulated dust control technology (the Continuous Personal Dust Monitor) on factors within an STS including employees' knowledge of, communication about, and use of technology to mitigate respirable dust sources. The results are presented in a way that first, addresses the overarching principles of meta-design STS including organizational participation, flexibility, and communication and second, examines how technology implementation processes differ when the organization is complying with a formal, higher-level requirement. Results show that a prominent focus on the social factors within an STS framework could help reduce unpredictability on the technical side and may improve communication within the system to help reduce adoption time, especially if and when accompanying a new, formal work process.

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Forty years of NIOSH/USBM-developed control technology: To reduce respirable dust exposure for miners in industrial minerals processing operations. Comparing the Implementation of Two Dust Control Technologies from a Sociotechnical Systems Perspective. Demonstrating the financial impact of mining injuries with the "Safety Pays in Mining" web application. Data transport over leaky feeder systems using Internet-Protocol-enabled land mobile radios. Improving protection against respirable dust at an underground crusher booth.
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