An empirical task analysis of warehouse order picking using head-mounted displays

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Abstract

Evaluations of task guidance systems often focus on evaluations of new technologies rather than comparing the nuances of interaction across the various systems. One common domain for task guidance systems is warehouse order picking. We present a method involving an easily reproducible ecologically motivated order picking environment for quantitative user studies designed to reveal differences in interactions. Using this environment, we perform a 12 participant within-subjects experiment demonstrating the advantages of a head-mounted display based picking chart over a traditional text-based pick list, a paper-based graphical pick chart, and a mobile pick-by-voice system. The test environment proved sufficiently sensitive, showing statistically significant results along several metrics with the head-mounted display system performing the best. We also provide a detailed analysis of the strategies adopted by our participants. © 2010 ACM.

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Weaver, K. A., Baumann, H., Starner, T., Iben, H., & Lawo, M. (2010). An empirical task analysis of warehouse order picking using head-mounted displays. In Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems - Proceedings (Vol. 3, pp. 1695–1704). https://doi.org/10.1145/1753326.1753580

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