- Gerd Kortuem1,
- David Alford2,
- Linden Ball2,
- Jerry Busby3,
- Nigel Davies1,
- Christos Efstratiou1,
- Joe Finney1,
- Marian Iszatt White3 &
- …
- Katharina Kinder3
Part of the book series:Lecture Notes in Computer Science ((LNISA,volume 4717))
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Abstract
Industrial health and safety is an important yet largely unexplored application area of ubiquitous computing. In this paper we investigate the relationship between technology and organization in the context of a concrete industrial health and safety system. The system is designed to reduce the number of incidents of “vibration white finger” (VWF) at construction sites and uses wireless sensor nodes for monitoring workers’ exposure to vibrations and testing of compliance with legal health and safety regulations. In particular we investigate the impact of this ubiquitous technology on the relationship between management and operatives, the formulation of health and safety rules and the risk perception and risk behavior of operatives. In addition, we contrast sensor-network inspired and smart artifact inspired compliance systems, and make the case that these technology models have a strong influence on the linkage between technology and organization.
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Authors and Affiliations
Computing Department, InfoLab21, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4WA, UK
Gerd Kortuem, Nigel Davies, Christos Efstratiou & Joe Finney
Department of Psychology, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YF, UK
David Alford & Linden Ball
Management School, Lancaster University, Lancaster, LA1 4YX, UK
Jerry Busby, Marian Iszatt White & Katharina Kinder
- Gerd Kortuem
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- David Alford
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- Linden Ball
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- Jerry Busby
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- Nigel Davies
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- Christos Efstratiou
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- Joe Finney
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- Marian Iszatt White
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- Katharina Kinder
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Kortuem, G.et al. (2007). Sensor Networks or Smart Artifacts? An Exploration of Organizational Issues of an Industrial Health and Safety Monitoring System. In: Krumm, J., Abowd, G.D., Seneviratne, A., Strang, T. (eds) UbiComp 2007: Ubiquitous Computing. UbiComp 2007. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 4717. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-74853-3_27
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