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Human factors affecting visual inspection of fatigue cracking in steel bridges

Leslie E. Campbell, Robert Connor, Julie M. Whitehead, Glenn Washer

2020Structure and Infrastructure Engineering20 citationsDOI

Abstract

In this study, the performance data from 30 inspectors evaluating 147 specimens with fatigue cracks in representative in-situ conditions were analysed to identify the role of human factors in bridge inspection. Two performance measures, the percentage of correct detections (detection rate) and the number of false calls, were considered. The variability in both performance measures was large, and only a small amount of the variance could be explained by individual characteristics or environmental conditions. Experience, training, temperature, and inspection duration were correlated with detection rate, while no single factor was correlated with false calls. A multivariate analysis found that the number of false calls could be best estimated considering an inspector’s employment sector and training, the maximum wind speed on the day of the inspection, and the use of a tape measure. Based on these results, recommendations for improved training methods, procedures, and equipment were developed.

Topics & Concepts

Visual inspectionFatigue crackingInspection timeBridge (graph theory)CrackingStatisticsVariance (accounting)EngineeringForensic engineeringEnvironmental scienceStructural engineeringComputer scienceMathematicsPsychologyMaterials scienceMedicineBusinessInternal medicineComposite materialAccountingDevelopmental psychologyInfrastructure Maintenance and MonitoringStructural Health Monitoring TechniquesOccupational Health and Safety Research
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