Assessment of mental workload In setting up fused filament fabrication equipment
Resumen
The objective of this chapter was to assess the mental load generated by
the task of setting up an FFF printer, before the printing process. The reason for this
evaluation is due to the portion of the resources demanded by the task. These
resources result in the degradation of performance if the execution of the task is not
carried out correctly, resulting in real problems in the printing process, and as a
consequence the repetition of the setting up tasks. The task analyzed consisted of
setting up 3d printing equipment. The activities that integrate the task were:
connection of the equipment of electrical terminal, turn on the equipment, leveling of
the printing bed, preheating of the equipment, and feeding of material. A group of
ten participants was integrated; each participant had experience in the handle of
FFF equipment. The participants develop activities of prototyping in FFF as their
activities of researcher assistants in prototyping lab and ergonomic design lab in
UACJ. Three phases integrated the methodology; 1) Hierarchical Task Analysis
(HTA), 2) assessment workload with NASA-TLX and 3) analysis results. The results
describe that mental demand, temporal demand, and effort were the sub-scales with
higher punctuation (79, 59, and 57). That means that participants manifest workload
due the mental demand (generated by thinking about the sequence of activities
developed and for develop, deciding the type of equipment adjustments, observing
the results of the fit tests, and looking for solution to problems with the equipment),
temporal demand (pressure of the time produced by the maximum time allowed by
the setting up), and effort (generated firstly by mental activities). Based on the
results, it is concluded that the use of mental load assessment methodology
facilitates the identification of mental load generating elements associated with a
specific task, which allows proposing a modification to the equipment focused on
reducing the effect of mental load over users of AM technologies.
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