Study of human accessibility: physical tests versus numerical simulation
Mathieu Delangle, \'Emilie Poirson, Jean Fran\c{c}ois Petiot

TL;DR
This paper introduces a dynamic human body modeling methodology that considers human interaction and behavior, providing a more adaptable assessment of accessibility compared to traditional static anthropometric data.
Contribution
It presents a novel dynamic modeling approach for human accessibility that incorporates behavioral factors and real prototype interactions, improving design assessment accuracy.
Findings
The dynamic model aligns closely with experimental accessibility measurements.
Traditional static anthropometric data may underestimate actual reach capabilities.
The methodology enables more realistic and adaptable environment design.
Abstract
Consideration of physical dimensions of the user population is essential to design adapted environment. This variability in body dimensions (called "anthropometry") is involved in design tools commonly used today to assess user's accommodation (physical mock-ups, population models, database, boundary manikins, hybrid methods or digital human modeling). Databases are created from campaigns of measurement. Besides the fact that such measures are costly in time and money, they give more "static" measures of man. They do not take into account possible stretching limbs that could allow increased accessibility. This paper presents a methodology for human body modeling, in a dynamic way, not static. The methodology allows to highlight influences of design and human behaviour on reach skills, directly induced by the interaction with real prototypes and not just considered by human physical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsErgonomics and Musculoskeletal Disorders · Gender Studies and Social Issues
