Unmanned aerial or terrestrial vehicles, commonly known as drones, are aircraft or land craft controlled by a ground-based operator.
Computer Vision & Camera Analytics
Video cameras, both body-worn and fixed-mounted, can reduce workplace violence risks by utilizing machine learning and artificial intelligence to monitor for workplace abnormalities. These include the ability to detect patterns of physical behavior and movement that could indicate physical violence without workers needing to identify aggressive behaviors directly.
Work at Height
Workers:
Employers:
23% said video behavior analytics would help mitigate their personal risk of a serious workplace injury or fatality
14% using
10% tested or tried
25% considering
34% no knowledge
56% of users adopted them in the previous year
Source +
Findings from the NSC 2020 Safety Technology in the Workplace Survey of 500 employers and 1,000 workers from safety-sensitive industries.
Why It’s Important:
Technology for gathering data using drones has undergone significant advances in recent years. Drones now often come equipped with 3D cameras, thermal imaging cameras, artificial intelligence, light detection and ranging (LiDAR) and 4K cameras with advanced sensors. Additionally, a variety of sensors and transducers use electronic gravitational, thermal, mechanical, electromagnetic and chemical capabilities, among others, to sense measures including gas leaks and atmospheric pressures. Drones also can perform numerous surveying tasks, many of which are already being undertaken commercially (Watkins, et al., 2020).
Drones have the ability to minimize safety risks associated with hazardous work conditions, and, in certain cases, eliminate them completely (NAEM, 2019). Operators can fly drones into high-risk situations and hard-to-reach areas to perform reality capture and take accurate measurements that
otherwise would have required employees to expose themselves to risky environments (Karakhan & Alsaffar, 2019).
The drone market comprises 12 usage scenarios for commercial, industrial and civil government (CICG) over four categories: inspections, monitoring, surveying and mapping, and emergency response. Despite the advancements of drone technology, short battery life remains a concern in many applications.
View from the Top: Using Aerial Drones for High-risk Situations
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Aerial drones can be used to reduce or eliminate serious injuries and fatalities related to working at height, the most common non-roadway hazard leading to workplace fatalities. Drones are used more and more to conduct aerial inspections and other work to keep employees safely on the ground.
Webinars:
Relevant Resources:
Augmented Reality for Real-time Safety Application
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A deeper dive into augmented reality with an overview of AR for safety training and real-time application. Speakers discuss case studies and impact, hardware and software solutions, and barriers and integration.
Expanding Safety for Confined Space Entry and Other Critical Tasks
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Critical workplace tasks may include a variety of jobs involving performing work in permit-required confined spaces or conducting surveys at height. Confined spaces typically have restricted means of entry or exit and are not designed for continuous human occupancy due to a lack of ventilation or other situational factors.
Expanding Safety for Confined Space Entry and Other Critical Tasks
Learn More
Critical workplace tasks may include a variety of jobs involving performing work in permit-required confined spaces or conducting surveys at height. Confined spaces typically have restricted means of entry or exit and are not designed for continuous human occupancy due to a lack of ventilation or other situational factors.
Augmented Reality for Real-time Safety Application
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A deeper dive into augmented reality with an overview of AR for safety training and real-time application. Speakers discuss case studies and impact, hardware and software solutions, and barriers and integration.
An Introduction to Drones for Workplace Safety
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Panelists discuss how the application of drones has evolved over the years and the wide range of industries adopting drones for improved safety. Common uses involve drones being sent into high-risk areas, such as confined spaces and areas requiring work at height.
Expanding Safety for Confined Space Entry and Other Critical Tasks
Learn More
Critical workplace tasks may include a variety of jobs involving performing work in permit-required confined spaces or conducting surveys at height. Confined spaces typically have restricted means of entry or exit and are not designed for continuous human occupancy due to a lack of ventilation or other situational factors.
Augmented Reality for Real-time Safety Application
Learn More
A deeper dive into augmented reality with an overview of AR for safety training and real-time application. Speakers discuss case studies and impact, hardware and software solutions, and barriers and integration.
View from the Top: Using Aerial Drones for High-risk Situations
Learn More
Aerial drones can be used to reduce or eliminate serious injuries and fatalities related to working at height, the most common non-roadway hazard leading to workplace fatalities. Drones are used more and more to conduct aerial inspections and other work to keep employees safely on the ground.
Expanding Safety for Confined Space Entry and Other Critical Tasks
Learn More
Critical workplace tasks may include a variety of jobs involving performing work in permit-required confined spaces or conducting surveys at height. Confined spaces typically have restricted means of entry or exit and are not designed for continuous human occupancy due to a lack of ventilation or other situational factors.
Augmented Reality for Real-time Safety Application
Learn More
A deeper dive into augmented reality with an overview of AR for safety training and real-time application. Speakers discuss case studies and impact, hardware and software solutions, and barriers and integration.
Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality for Hazardous Work Training
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A four-part research series on increasingly popular technologies that can reduce top workplace risks: Drones for Working at Height and Confined Space Inspections, Wearables for Fatigue Monitoring, Proximity Sensors to Avoid Equipment Strikes at the Worksite, and Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality for Hazardous Work Training.
White Papers:
Expanding Safety for Confined Space Entry and Other Critical Tasks
Learn More
Critical workplace tasks may include a variety of jobs involving performing work in permit-required confined spaces or conducting surveys at height. Confined spaces typically have restricted means of entry or exit and are not designed for continuous human occupancy due to a lack of ventilation or other situational factors.
Augmented Reality for Real-time Safety Application
Learn More
A deeper dive into augmented reality with an overview of AR for safety training and real-time application. Speakers discuss case studies and impact, hardware and software solutions, and barriers and integration.
View from the Top: Using Aerial Drones for High-risk Situations
Learn More
Aerial drones can be used to reduce or eliminate serious injuries and fatalities related to working at height, the most common non-roadway hazard leading to workplace fatalities. Drones are used more and more to conduct aerial inspections and other work to keep employees safely on the ground.
Expanding Safety for Confined Space Entry and Other Critical Tasks
Learn More
Critical workplace tasks may include a variety of jobs involving performing work in permit-required confined spaces or conducting surveys at height. Confined spaces typically have restricted means of entry or exit and are not designed for continuous human occupancy due to a lack of ventilation or other situational factors.
Nutrien’s use of underwater drones
Learn More
Boiler work is notoriously dangerous, though necessary, often exposing employees to confined spaces, high temperatures, and poor air quality. To combat this risk, AES implemented the use of drones to minimize human entry into boilers. This case study explores the process and impacts of the technology on productivity, operations, and
safety in the workplace.
AES’s use of drones
Learn More
Boiler work is notoriously dangerous, though necessary, often exposing employees to confined spaces, high temperatures, and poor air quality. To combat this risk, AES implemented the use of drones to minimize human entry into boilers. This case study explores the process and impacts of the technology on productivity, operations, and
safety in the workplace.
Case Studies:
Expanding Safety for Confined Space Entry and Other Critical Tasks
Learn More
Critical workplace tasks may include a variety of jobs involving performing work in permit-required confined spaces or conducting surveys at height. Confined spaces typically have restricted means of entry or exit and are not designed for continuous human occupancy due to a lack of ventilation or other situational factors.
Augmented Reality for Real-time Safety Application
Learn More
A deeper dive into augmented reality with an overview of AR for safety training and real-time application. Speakers discuss case studies and impact, hardware and software solutions, and barriers and integration.
View from the Top: Using Aerial Drones for High-risk Situations
Learn More
Aerial drones can be used to reduce or eliminate serious injuries and fatalities related to working at height, the most common non-roadway hazard leading to workplace fatalities. Drones are used more and more to conduct aerial inspections and other work to keep employees safely on the ground.
Expanding Safety for Confined Space Entry and Other Critical Tasks
Learn More
Critical workplace tasks may include a variety of jobs involving performing work in permit-required confined spaces or conducting surveys at height. Confined spaces typically have restricted means of entry or exit and are not designed for continuous human occupancy due to a lack of ventilation or other situational factors.
Nutrien’s use of underwater drones
Learn More
Boiler work is notoriously dangerous, though necessary, often exposing employees to confined spaces, high temperatures, and poor air quality. To combat this risk, AES implemented the use of drones to minimize human entry into boilers. This case study explores the process and impacts of the technology on productivity, operations, and
safety in the workplace.
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for inspection
Learn More
Boiler work is notoriously dangerous, though necessary, often exposing employees to confined spaces, high temperatures, and poor air quality. To combat this risk, AES implemented the use of drones to minimize human entry into boilers. This case study explores the process and impacts of the technology on productivity, operations, and
safety in the workplace.
Calculators:
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Relevant Hazardous Situations:
Workplace Violence
Vehicle Pedestrian Interaction
Relevant Hazardous Situations:
Workplace Violence
Vehicle Pedestrian Interaction
Visit our annual Expo to hear directly from the leading suppliers.
See This Technology In Action
Visit our annual Expo to hear directly from the leading suppliers.
See This Technology In Action
Read the whitepaper about using computer vision as a risk mitigation tool.
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