2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.apergo.2016.07.015
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Coordinating the interruption of assembly workers in manufacturing

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Cited by 17 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…This discrepancy is explained in part by the results from HFE research (Section 2.2), which suggests the embodiment of the robot interruptions and the skill-based main task contributed to unaffected task performance: it is likely that participants were able to optimize their build process such that their performance remained unaffected on the metrics of task throughput that we instrumented. With better instrumentation, future research has the potential to examine additional metrics of task performance, such as interruption resumption lag [30,33,43], which should differ between RND and MDL according to the predictions of the Goal-Activation model [2].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This discrepancy is explained in part by the results from HFE research (Section 2.2), which suggests the embodiment of the robot interruptions and the skill-based main task contributed to unaffected task performance: it is likely that participants were able to optimize their build process such that their performance remained unaffected on the metrics of task throughput that we instrumented. With better instrumentation, future research has the potential to examine additional metrics of task performance, such as interruption resumption lag [30,33,43], which should differ between RND and MDL according to the predictions of the Goal-Activation model [2].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, in embodied settings, when people defer an incoming interruption, they are more likely to complete their original task [23]; a result predicted by Prospective Memory [38] models of interruption handling [24]. Recent results from HFE continue to show that performance loss is not noticeable with tasks that are embodied or skill-based, even when the interruptions might be computer mediated as in the work of Lee & Duffy [35] and Kolbeinsson et al [33]. These authors, in particular, reason that performance loss is absent in an embodied setting because it is impossible to occlude the main task, which allows people to optimize common sub tasks and choose when to switch to an interruption.…”
Section: Evaluating Interruption Consequencesmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…Arbitrary, contrived tasks can manipulate design factors such as task difficulty and interruption moments and durations, whereas actual tasks in natural settings are easily supported by various post-interruption tools and artifacts, which guide one back into the task in other ways. Several interruption studies were carried out with actual authentic tasks including the comparison of interruption modes in a manufacturing process [66] and the investigation of resumption lags in interrupted critical care tasks in the healthcare domain [67]; however, more interruption studies are still needed to understand how to minimize the negative effects of interruptions.…”
Section: Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 99%