Conference Proceedings
Second International Future Mining Conference 2011
Conference Proceedings
Second International Future Mining Conference 2011
The Augmented Mine Worker - Applications of Augmented Reality in Mining
The mining industry is faced with imperatives to improve worker safety and productivity, adapt to skills shortages, high worker turnover rates, and provide more effective maintenance to new and ever more complicated plant and equipment._x000D_
While more effective use of data combined with advanced analytics offers opportunities for improvement, providing this information to the worker in the field, in realtime, has proven expensive, cumbersome and ineffective. New capabilities are now emerging which address some of the limitations experienced to date. Augmented reality (AR) provides a means to overlay interactive digital information on top of the physical world. Combining the latest visual display, mobile computing and track and trace' technologies, AR provides an experience similar to a heads-up display in a fighter jet through small, personnel devices, such as smart phones or wearable glasses. Applying AR would allow a mobile worker to see' all relevant information for a given task, in the context of their physical environment and at the time they require it. The technologies behind AR are rapidly maturing and becoming available at a price point that is viable for commercial applications. It is anticipated that AR will become ubiquitous at a consumer level within the next five years. The specific challenges faced by the mining industry make it an ideal early adopter of AR technologies. This paper examines a number of use-cases of how AR can be applied to the mining industry and the benefits that can be realised. The paper will identify areas of further work and viable opportunities for immediate adoption within the industry._x000D_
FORMAL CITATION:Bassan, J, Srinivasan, V and Tang, A, 2011. The augmented mine worker - applications of augmented reality in mining, in Proceedings Second International Future Mining Conference 2011, pp 261-272 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
While more effective use of data combined with advanced analytics offers opportunities for improvement, providing this information to the worker in the field, in realtime, has proven expensive, cumbersome and ineffective. New capabilities are now emerging which address some of the limitations experienced to date. Augmented reality (AR) provides a means to overlay interactive digital information on top of the physical world. Combining the latest visual display, mobile computing and track and trace' technologies, AR provides an experience similar to a heads-up display in a fighter jet through small, personnel devices, such as smart phones or wearable glasses. Applying AR would allow a mobile worker to see' all relevant information for a given task, in the context of their physical environment and at the time they require it. The technologies behind AR are rapidly maturing and becoming available at a price point that is viable for commercial applications. It is anticipated that AR will become ubiquitous at a consumer level within the next five years. The specific challenges faced by the mining industry make it an ideal early adopter of AR technologies. This paper examines a number of use-cases of how AR can be applied to the mining industry and the benefits that can be realised. The paper will identify areas of further work and viable opportunities for immediate adoption within the industry._x000D_
FORMAL CITATION:Bassan, J, Srinivasan, V and Tang, A, 2011. The augmented mine worker - applications of augmented reality in mining, in Proceedings Second International Future Mining Conference 2011, pp 261-272 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Contributor(s):
J Bassan, V Srinivasan, A Tang
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- Published: 2011
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