215 research outputs found
Propuesta para el diseño ergonómico en las tres salas de profesores de la facultad de ingeniería en la sede el claustro de la Universidad Católica de Colombia
Proyecto InstitucionalIdentificar y evaluar los factores de iluminación, temperatura, ruido y espacios que afectan las condiciones ergonómicas de los puestos de trabajo actuales, que se presenta en las tres salas de profesores de la Facultad de Ingeniería de la Sede el Claustro de la Universidad Católica de Colombia.INTRODUCCIÓN
1.GENERALIDADES
2. EVALUACIÓN DE ESPACIOS Y CONDICIONES3. ANALIZAR LAS FORTALEZAS Y DEBILIDADES DEL DISEÑO Y ORGANIZACIÓN, QUE PRESENTAN ACTUALMENTE LAS SALAS DE PROFESORES, A TRAVÉS DE UN DOFA
4. IDENTIFICAR OPORTUNIDADES DE MEJORA FACTIBLES ENCAMINADAS A MINIMIZAR LOS FACTORES DE RIESGO ERGONÓMICO EN LOS PUESTOS DE TRABAJO
5. CONCLUSIONES
6. RECOMENDACIONES
BIBLIOGRAFÍAPregradoIngeniero Industria
Recommended from our members
Final Technical Report
Executive Summary The document contains Final Technical Report on the Industrial Assessment Center Program at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, covering the contract period of 9/1/2002 to 11/30/2006, under the contract DE-FC36-02GO 12073. The Report describes six required program tasks, as follows: TASK 1 is a summary of the assessments performed over the life of the award: 77 assessments were performed, 595 AR were recommended, covering a very broad range of manufacturing plants. TASK 2 is a description of the efforts to promote and increase the adoption of assessment recommendations and employ innovative methods to assist in accomplishing these goals. The LMU IAC has been very successful in accomplishing the program goals, including implemented savings of 10,045,411 in productivity and 15,218,025. This represents 44% of the recommended savings of $34,896,392. TASK 3 is a description of the efforts promoting the IAC Program and enhancing recruitment efforts for new clients and expanded geographic coverage. LMU IAC has been very successful recruiting new clients covering Southern California. Every year, the intended number of clients was recruited. TASK 4 describes the educational opportunities, training, and other related activities for IAC students. A total of 38 students graduated from the program, including 2-3 graduate students every semester, and the remainder undergraduate students, mostly from the Mechanical Engineering Department. The students received formal weekly training in energy (75%) and productivity (25). All students underwent extensive safety training. All students praised the IAC experience very highly. TASK 5 describes the coordination and integration of the Center activities with other Center and IAC Program activities, and DOE programs. LMU IAC worked closely with MIT, and SDSU IAC and SFSU IAC, and enthusiastically supported the SEN activities. TASK 6 describes other tasks and accomplishments. During the award period, Assistant Director Rudy Marloth became a DOE Qualified Specialist in PHAST, a DOE Qualified Specialist in Compressed Air, and a Certified Energy Manager, and earned a MS degree in Environmental Science
Recommended from our members
Time to care: why the humanities and the social sciences belong in the science of health
Health is more than the absence of disease. It is also more than a biological phenomenon. It is inherently social, psychological, cultural, and historical. Social and personal resources are both key components and key determinants of health, as it has been recognised by major health actors for decades [1–3]. However, open questions remain as to how to build systems that reflect the complexity of health, healthy lives, disease, and sickness, and in a context that is increasingly technologized. Although we find in the literature an increasing understanding of the complexity of health [4–7], the implementation of this knowledge lags behind. Biological approaches to health and disease, as a matter of fact, dominate the development of curative and preventive interventions.
We argue that an urgent change of approach is necessary. Methods and concepts from the humanities and social science must be embedded in the concepts and methods of the health sciences and of public health, if we are to promote sustainable interventions capable of engaging with the recognized complexity of health, healthy lives, disease, and sickness. This resonates with the vision expressed by UK Health Secretary and by many policy documents [8,9] from the last decades. Yet, given the difficulties associated with interdisciplinary research, integrated strategies to understand and to intervene on the complexity of health and that engage with biological, social, psychological and behavioural factors are still needed.
Our vision is one of radical interdisciplinarity, integrating aspects of biological, psychological, social, and humanities approaches across areas of urgent health need. These areas include, but is not confined to, chronic conditions such as the obesity epidemic, cancer, mental health. Radical interdisciplinarity entails the practical, methodological, and conceptual integration of approaches to health, as they are developed in the health and social sciences, and in the humanities. It is the combination of cognitive resources from individuals belonging to different disciplines, who accept and respect the division of labour and the resulting epistemic dependence to tackle phenomena that would not be adequately conceptualised within any of the involved discipline alone [10]. In what follows, we describe our current understanding of these three aspects, and describe how radical interdisciplinarity would change them.Not funde
La horticultura insustentable transiciones agroecológicas en el Valle Inferior del Río Negro-Argentina
El estudio de un equipo de investigadores interdisciplinarios analiza la Horticultura Insustentable y transiciones agroecológicas en el Valle Inferior del Río Negro –Argentina. se consideró que más allá de los esfuerzos de las familias, organizaciones e instituciones dirigidos a incrementar la sustentabilidad de los sistemas y mejorar la calidad de vida de las familias productoras, existen limitantes estructurales para gran parte de los agricultores que, para ser superadas, requieren del rol activo del Estado en el desarrollo de
políticas públicas dirigidas a facilitar el acceso a la propiedad de la tierra y el apoyo a la producción y comercialización de alimentos sanos.Foi realizado pesquisa por uma equipe de pesquisadores interdisciplinares que analisou a horticultura e transições agroecológicas no Vale Inferior do Rio Negro - Argentina. Considerou-se que além dos esforços das famílias, organizações e instituições que visam aumentar a sustentabilidade dos sistemas e melhorar a qualidade de vida das famílias produtoras, existem
limitações estruturais para grande parte dos agricultores que, para serem
superados. Essa questão exige do Estado papel ativo no desenvolvimento de políticas públicas destinadas a facilitar o acesso à propriedade da terra e apoiar a produção e comercialização de alimentos saudáveis.EEA Valle InferiorFil: Seba, Nicolas. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Valle Inferior; ArgentinaFil: María Teresa Doñate. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Valle Inferior; ArgentinaFil: Cecchini, Valeria. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Valle Inferior; ArgentinaFil: Telleria, Axel.Instituto de Desarrollo del Valle Inferior. Río Negro. ArgentinaFil: Vera, Guillermo. Provincia de Río Negro. Ministerio de Agricultura; ArgentinaFil: Sidoti Hartman Brunilda. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Valle Inferior; ArgentinaFil: Arriagada, Sergio. Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). Estación Experimental Agropecuaria Valle Inferior. Agencia de Extensión Rural Carmen de Patagones; ArgentinaFil: Román, Carolina. Instituto de Desarrollo del Valle Inferior de Río Negro; Argentin
SOME NEW SOUTH AFRICAN SUCCULENTS. Part III
Volume: 2Start Page: 33End Page: 3
- …