ITcon Vol. 16, pg. 69-84, http://www.itcon.org/2011/5

A pilot study of a 3D game environment for construction safety education

submitted:March 2010
revised:July 2010
published:January 2011
editor(s):Turk Z
authors:Ken-Yu Lin, Assistant Professor,
University of Washington, WA, USA;
kenyulin@uw.edu

Jeong Wook Son, PhD Candidate,
University of Washington, WA, USA;
json@uw.edu

Eddy M. Rojas, Professor and Director
The Durham School of Architectural Engineering and Construction,
University of Nebraska-Lincoln, NE, USA;
er@unl.edu
summary:Education is crucial to promoting a safe and healthful working environment in construction and teaching students to identify potential job hazards is its very first step. The authors proposed a 3D video game, Safety Inspector, to provide a comprehensive safety training environment in which students assume the roles of safety inspectors and walk the game site to identify potential hazards. Violations of different modelling difficulties and various levels of safety knowledge for identifying these violations were listed to guide the development. The game was also designed with an agenda to address features such as realism, self-learning, non-linearity, interactivity, etc. Torque 3D game engine was leveraged for implementing the game system and Autodesk 3ds Max as well as MilkShape 3D were used to create the needed but unavailable 3D objects. An important development strategy was approximation - this applied to both the definition of object collision boundaries and the texture mappings. A small group of students from the Department of Construction Management at the University of Washington helped test the preliminary game system. The testing results indicated that with the game students increased their learning interests, enjoyed the learning process, and were motivated to refresh their safety knowledge. In addition, students also showed optimistic attitudes towards using the game scoring as a way to reflect their safety knowledge. In overall, the evaluation results suggested a positive outlook of the game and encouraged the continuous development of Safety Inspector. However, the prototype system did not incorporate all the desired violations or features and should be further enriched in its next version. Pedagogical issues newly discovered during the game evaluation process are to be addressed as a part of the future work.
keywords:construction safety, hazard recognition, video game, education, computer-assisted learning.
full text: (PDF file, 0.698 MB)
citation:Lin K-Y, Son J W, Rojas E M (2011). A pilot study of a 3D game environment for construction safety education, ITcon Vol. 16, Special issue Use of Gaming Technology in Architecture, Engineering and Construction, pg. 69-84, https://www.itcon.org/2011/5