Contact Information: For more information: Jeff Brum Mechdyne Corporation 519-664-0036, ext. 221 Matt Schmidt FS Communications 650-345-3549
Engineers Use Visualization Environment From Mechdyne for Studies to Improve Construction Worker Safety
NIOSH Research Team Replacing Decade Old System With HD-Quality Digital Projection to Enhance "Virtual" Construction Site Studies
| Source: Mechdyne Corporation
MARSHALLTOWN, IA--(Marketwire - February 26, 2009) - Mechdyne Corporation today announced that
it was selected to design and install a new CAVE immersive visualization
system for the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH) in Morgantown, West Virginia. The new system replaces a decade old
CAVE used by NIOSH to safely study the dynamics of construction worker
movement at heights and suggest ways to reduce the risk of injury or death
from falls.
Mechdyne, which designed the original CAVE at the facility, was awarded the
contract for the new system, which includes active stereo digital
projectors, wireless tracking and a more powerful image generation
computer. Though the original system was considered state-of-the-art when
installed in 1995, the new CAVE's HD resolution, 3000 lumen per wall
brightness and richer computer-generated graphics will dramatically
increase the realism of the virtual worksite environments developed by the
NIOSH researchers.
"We've demonstrated in our current work that simulations of workplace
environments safely and reliably substitute for the 'real world,'" said
John Powers, Supervisory General Engineer with NIOSH. "With the enhanced
realism of the new system, the virtual environments will be even more
effective tools for learning how to improve worker safety."
Typical research at the NIOSH facility involves creating construction
environments, such as the beams of a building skeleton, planks on
scaffolding, high roof areas and trusses or cranes in motion. Experienced
workers, wearing sensors to measure stress levels and motion patterns, walk
and perform tasks common to these environments. If a "fall" occurs, it is
not actually at height, but on the floor level surface of the CAVE.
"We've seen visualization technology make enormous leaps in performance
since we installed the original CAVE for NIOSH," said Chris Clover,
president and chief executive officer of Mechdyne. "And while Mechdyne has
helped expand the uses of advanced visualization into many other fields, it
is gratifying to see the continued benefits of simulation as a tool in
research applications, particularly one directed at occupational and public
safety."
The new CAVE includes three vertical walls and an illuminated floor, with
each 10 x 13 ft image surface illuminated by a 1450 x 1050 pixel Digital
Projection Titan DLP projector. Mechdyne is also integrating an InterSense
wireless tracking system for synchronization of stereo imagery, a
Hewlett-Packard PC cluster with Nvidia Quadraplex graphics for image
generation, and software modules to provide immersive stereo capability for
applications from Multigen-Paradigm and Google Earth.
About Mechdyne Corporation
Mechdyne Corporation is the world's largest company dedicated to consulting
and development of immersive, networked and collaborative visualization
solutions. Winner of a 2008 AV Award from ArchiTech Magazine and Infocomm,
the company addresses complex projects where an in-depth understanding of
user requirements leads to the development of products and customized
solutions involving elements of visual, software and support systems.
Mechdyne's product divisions provide advanced display technology,
audio/visual systems design, and implementation services, as well as
immersive and interactive software development and support. Headquartered
in Marshalltown, Iowa, Mechdyne's customers include leading government
laboratories, military research programs, energy companies and a variety of
'edutainment,' manufacturing, and other users of visualization technology.
More information is available at www.mechdyne.com.
NOTE: Mention of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH) does not constitute a commercial endorsement by NIOSH. A video
report on the NIOSH research program (using its original CAVE system) can
be found at: http://www.aip.org/dbis/stories/2008/18039.html