Employing a virtual reality tool to explicate tacit knowledge of machine operations

Alexandr Vasenev, Timo Hartmann, Andries G. Doree

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionAcademicpeer-review

58 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

The quality and durability of asphalted roads strongly depends on the final step in the road construction process; the profiling and compaction of the fresh spread asphalt. During compaction machine operators continuously make decisions on how to proceed with the compaction accounting for projectspecific aspects as: ambient conditions, road geometry, roller type, asphalt mixture characteristics and behavior of other machines. In discussions over quality improvement in road construction it is often suggested to robotize rollers. To operate such robots would of course require operational strategies and routines. The reality of this moment is that these operational strategies and routines are not documented. To identify the existing best working practices and, ultimately, to proceed with developing automated robotized compactors, the knowledge of machine operators should at first be explored and described in a formalized way. Unfortunately operators have difficulty verbalizing their expertise. Observation of behavior, as machine movement patterns, could be helpful to extract the operational strategies, but such observations are time and labor consuming. To overcome this burden we developed a Virtual Reality (VR) environment. In this VR environment operators perform compaction virtually, and their operational choices are traced and analysed. This paper describes this VR development and explains how it helps in following machine operators and extracting their (tacit) professional knowledge. The road geometry and the working conditions are visually represented; the operators show - rather than explain - how they would proceed with the compaction process in the given conditions. Movements of virtual machines are documented, analysed, visualised and discussed. This VR approach is expected to contribute to learning, to more formal description of operational strategies; stepping stones towards compaction algorithms for roller robotisation.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationISARC 2013, the 30th International Symposium on Automation and Robotics in Construction and Mining, August 11-15, 2013, Montreal, Canada
EditorsF. Hassani
Place of PublicationMontreal, Canada
PublisherISARC
Pages1-8
Publication statusPublished - 11 Aug 2013
Event30th International Symposium on Automation and Robotics in Construction, ISARC 2013: Building the future in automation and robotics - Montreal, Canada
Duration: 11 Aug 201315 Aug 2013
Conference number: 30

Publication series

Name
PublisherISARC

Conference

Conference30th International Symposium on Automation and Robotics in Construction, ISARC 2013
Abbreviated titleISARC
Country/TerritoryCanada
CityMontreal
Period11/08/1315/08/13

Keywords

  • METIS-297398
  • IR-90803

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Employing a virtual reality tool to explicate tacit knowledge of machine operations'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this