Title :
Effect of a 12-hour/day shift on performance
Author :
Lewis, Paul M. ; Swaim, Dan J.
Author_Institution :
Pacific Northwest Lab., Richland, WA, USA
Abstract :
The operating crews at the Fast Flux Facility near Richland, Washington, changed their rotating shift schedule from an 8- to a 12-hour/day work schedule. The primary reason for the change was to reduce the attrition of operators by increasing their job satisfaction. A statistical analysis of 53 operator-related, off-normal events in 28 months concluded that there was no significant difference in either the number or the severity of off-normal events on the 12-hour shift. A statistical analysis of 200000 log entries concluded that the error rate in completing logs actually declined the 25% on the 12-hour shift. Alertness, which was measured using computerized tests of mathematics and logical reasoning, reach a nadir on the first night shift for the 8- and 12-hour schedules alike, which indicates that the primary cause of fatigue was sleep disruption, not cumulative hours of work. All supervisors and 52% of the operators believe their crews work more effectively on the 12-hour shift. Only 12% of the operators believe that their crews work less effectively.<>
Keywords :
human factors; nuclear power stations; personnel; USA; error rate; fatigue; human factors; operators; performance; personnel; shift schedule; statistical analysis; Error analysis; Fatigue; Industrial training; Job shop scheduling; Laboratories; Monitoring; Occupational safety; Processor scheduling; Sleep; Statistical analysis;
Conference_Titel :
Human Factors and Power Plants, 1988., Conference Record for 1988 IEEE Fourth Conference on
Conference_Location :
Monterey, CA, USA
DOI :
10.1109/HFPP.1988.27555