Häggström, Carola
- Institutionen för skogens biomaterial och teknologi, Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet
- Skogforsk
Forskningsartikel2016Vetenskapligt granskad
Haggstrom, Carola; Lindroos, Ola
In recent years, concern has been raised that the trend of continuous productivity improvements of forest harvesting has stagnated and even declined in the Nordics. This selective literature review therefore examines human factors research with regard to the performance of the harvesting system, and outlines how human factors research can stimulate continued performance improvements. The focus is on implications for mechanized cut-to-length (CTL) operations and, especially, research of importance to the operation of the single grip harvester and the harvester-forwarder system. Most literature for this review was found in the Web of Knowledge and Google Scholar databases or as a consequence of the snowballing approach also applied. A conceptual framework was used to facilitate the analysis of the interrelated elements - Human, Technology, Organization and Environment (HTO-E). The right abilities, skills, techniques and training alone are not sufficient for ensuring high performance of the logging system. To address this discrepancy, education, training, (semi-) automation, shift scheduling, harvester-forwarder cooperation, inter-and intra-organizational knowledge exchange were all recognized as important areas for improvement and development. Great difficulties exist in predicting outcomes when introducing change, for example automation, into a system. However, the consequences of not trying may be detrimental to productivity as well as safety in mechanized forestry. Thus, it is important to research into methods, interfaces, forms of interaction, risk analyses and automation technology. HTO-E and a systems perspective provide a good basis for understanding the work today and making educated predictions for the future.
HTO; MTO; mechanized logging; ergonomics; forestry; literature review
International Journal of Forest Engineering
2016, volym: 27, nummer: 2, sidor: 67-78
SDG9 Hållbar industri, innovationer och infrastruktur
Skogsvetenskap
Produktionsteknik, arbetsvetenskap och ergonomi
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/77449