Daniel E. Welcome
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Daniel E. Welcome.
Occupational ergonomics | 2016
Daniel E. Welcome; Ren G. Dong; Xueyan S. Xu; Christopher Warren; Thomas W. McDowell
BACKGROUND Fingers-transmitted vibration can cause vibration-induced white finger. The effectiveness of vibration-reducing (VR) gloves for reducing hand transmitted vibration to the fingers has not been sufficiently examined. OBJECTIVE The objective of this study is to examine tool-specific performance of VR gloves for reducing finger-transmitted vibrations in three orthogonal directions (3D) from powered hand tools. METHODS A transfer function method was used to estimate the tool-specific effectiveness of four typical VR gloves. The transfer functions of the VR glove fingers in three directions were either measured in this study or during a previous study using a 3D laser vibrometer. More than seventy vibration spectra of various tools or machines were used in the estimations. RESULTS When assessed based on frequency-weighted acceleration, the gloves provided little vibration reduction. In some cases, the gloves amplified the vibration by more than 10%, especially the neoprene glove. However, the neoprene glove did the best when the assessment was based on unweighted acceleration. The neoprene glove was able to reduce the vibration by 10% or more of the unweighted vibration for 27 out of the 79 tools. If the dominant vibration of a tool handle or workpiece was in the shear direction relative to the fingers, as observed in the operation of needle scalers, hammer chisels, and bucking bars, the gloves did not reduce the vibration but increased it. CONCLUSIONS This study confirmed that the effectiveness for reducing vibration varied with the gloves and the vibration reduction of each glove depended on tool, vibration direction to the fingers, and finger location. VR gloves, including certified anti-vibration gloves do not provide much vibration reduction when judged based on frequency-weighted acceleration. However, some of the VR gloves can provide more than 10% reduction of the unweighted vibration for some tools or workpieces. Tools and gloves can be matched for better effectiveness for protecting the fingers.
American Conference on Human Vibration 2010 | 2016
Ren G. Dong; Daniel E. Welcome; Thomas W. McDowell; Xueyan S. Xu; John Z. Wu; Subhash Rakheja
Proceedings of the 4th American Conference on Human Vibration | 2012
Daniel E. Welcome; Ren G. Dong; Xueyan S. Xu; Christopher Warren; Thomas W. McDowell; John Z. Wu
Proceedings of the 6th American Conference on Human Vibration | 2016
Daniel E. Welcome; Xueyan S. Xu; Thomas W. McDowell; Christopher Warren; John Z. Wu; Ren G. Dong
Proceedings of the 6th American Conference on Human Vibration | 2016
Daniel Pan; Xueyan S. Xu; Daniel E. Welcome; Thomas W. McDowell; Christopher Warren; John Z. Wu; Ren G. Dong
American Conference on Human Vibration 2010 | 2016
Bryan M. Wimer; Thomas W. McDowell; Xueyan S. Xu; Daniel E. Welcome; Christopher Warren; Ren G. Dong
Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Hand-Arm Vibration | 2015
John Z. Wu; Ren G. Dong; Daniel E. Welcome; Thomas W. McDowell
Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Hand-Arm Vibration | 2015
Xueyan S. Xu; Daniel E. Welcome; Christopher Warren; Thomas W. McDowell; John Z. Wu; Ren G. Dong
Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Hand-Arm Vibration | 2015
Daniel E. Welcome; Xueyan S. Xu; Christopher Warren; Thomas W. McDowell; John Z. Wu; Ren G. Dong
Proceedings of the 5th American Conference on Human Vibration | 2014
Kristine Krajnak; Stacey Waugh; G. Roger Miller; Claud Johnson; Daniel E. Welcome; Sherry Xu; Christopher Warren; Ren G. Dong