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Time and Motion Study Volume 6 Issue 9

Work Study

ISSN: 0043-8022

Article publication date: 1 September 1957

138

Abstract

THE study of fatigue from a physiological aspect is a field which motion study technicians have made little or no attempt to explore. Shame on their heads. The physiological simplification of motions aimed at reducing fatigue could have completely offset the notion that motion study is aimed at converting the operator into an automaton. It may well be that an elaborate motion pattern set‐up designed to simplify the work merely succeeds in setting up stresses in the worker. The superimposing of a time‐studied standard for the job may not have taken into account the adaptation of the speed of motions to the physiological limitations of the operator working at a high level performance. Very few practitioners have attempted to study motions in the factory with a view to reducing fatigue and stress as a prerequisite to studying the set‐up for increased production. Still fewer have attempted to evaluate these factors. It is about time they did.

Citation

(1957), "Time and Motion Study Volume 6 Issue 9", Work Study, Vol. 6 No. 9, pp. 13-59. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb048104

Publisher

:

MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1957, MCB UP Limited

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