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Ergonomics issues related to children, computers and schools Susumu Saito Institute for Science of Labour, Kawasaki, Japan Rapid introduction of information and communication technology into the school environment was revealed to have possibilities to create obstacles to health and safety of children. It is necessary to be paid more attention based on the following ergonomics viewpoints to protect the healthy developments of children. Using the large display caused constrained working posture, increase in ocular surface area and shift in binocular vision. Those physiological problems are more serious for those with a small physique, such as schoolchildren. Using the notebook computer caused visual fatigue and constrained posture. Before introduction of the notebook computer into schools, practical use of the ergonomics guidelines is recommended. Ergonomics requirements might be needed for using the complicated Chinese characters from the ophthalmological viewpoints. Ergonomics involving children and the educational environments is considered to be a key issue in ensuring the safety and security of those in our society. INTRODUCTION In our society, information and communication technology (ICT) has been rapidly introduced into schools as well as offices, factories and homes. Although the International Ergonomics Association (IEA) has continued lively activities through its technical committee (TC), Ergonomics for Children and the Educational Environments (ECEE), many ergonomics problems related to ICT use by children, such as musculoskeletal disorders and visual fatigue, remain unsolved. Nigel Corlett in a forward to a recently published book stated that “in spite of the large population of children, school (the workplace of the young) has a relatively small body of ergonomics studies and the ergonomics of play even less” (Corlett, 2008). Children are the torchbearers and the creators of the health and safety of our society. The aim of this paper is to review the musculoskeletal and ophthalmological aspects of ICT use in schools and to clarify the ergonomics problems while children using the ICT tools in educational environments. TRENDS OF ERGONOMICS RELATED TO ICT AND AREAS OF CHILD HEALTH As early as at the 2nd International Conference on Work with Display Units, or WWDU’89, in Montreal, Bengt Knave anticipated serious problems in the use of video display units (VDU) in schools (Knave, 1989). He summarized many obstacles in the use of VDU in schools and emphasized the necessity to solve the various problems related to VDU use presented to both teachers and children. The ergonomics issue of "IT in schools" was followed-up at the 5th WWDU'97 in Tokyo (Knave, 1997). A symposium entitled “Children, Computers and Classrooms” was held at the IEA 14th Triennial Congress in 2000. The late Cheryl Bennett, the first chairperson of the IEA/TC/ECEE, organized and led this symposium to success (Bennett, 2000). David Caple, the IEA president, contributed a memorial to his Letter from the President (Caple, 2007). Karen Jacobs has eagerly taken over the ECEE committee activities (Jacobs, 2009). The relevant papers and references to this area are open to the public in the website of ECEE. In the site, the worldwide studies are summarized in the table, and classified in the fields of anthropometrics, computer use, computer and vision, school furniture design, low back issues, etc. The publication of a voluminous work, Ergonomics for Children, was an epoch-making event in bringing about an understanding of the massive body of knowledge on this subject as is represented by its subtitle, “Designing Products and Places for Toddlers to Teens” (Lueder and Rice (Eds.), 2008). One chapter in this book is “Information and Communication Technology in Schools” (Pollock and Straker, 2008). The Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) announced on its web site (MEXT, 2008a) that as of March 2008, 56.5% of classrooms in elementary schools in Japan had visual display terminals (VDT) equipped with the Local Area Network system (LAN). The new ICT strategy of the Japanese government includes the aim that all public school classrooms be equipped with LAN by March 2011. Developments in science and technology are double-edged swords that may improve the quality of human life but that also may create obstacles to health and safety. This point of view should be a source of concern, and special requirements are needed in the case of growing children who are vulnerable to injury and the effects of stress. A proactive approach must be taken to eliminate foreseeable ergonomics problems in schools caused by the use of these technologies. Special ergonomics requirements are needed for growing children Japan is one of the countries that uses the complicated Kanji or Chinese characters and has a keyboard input style for word processing that differs from that in countries that use the alphabet. The number of Chinese characters designated for daily use in Japan, such as in newspapers, official documents, etc., is 1945. The Japanese government mandates that elementary schoolchildren should learn 1,006 Chinese characters. Reading block letters and discriminating those complicated characters on the electronic display might cause an excessive workload on the eyes of schoolchildren, which was reported in our experimental and clinical studies (Marumoto et al., 1999, 2003). Edwards and Lam reported that an epidemiological study in Hong Kong showed that the prevalence of myopia amongst the Chinese had escalated in recent decades (Edwards and Lam, 2004). They concluded that the increase in the prevalence of myopia could be postulated to be due to environmental factors. Increase in the ratio of myopic children, and international comparative data on myopia in school-age children. There is disagreement as to whether myopia or nearsightedness is caused by genetics or the environment (Fostervold and Ankrum, 2008). The MEXT annually reports data on growth and development as well as the health conditions of boys and girls in schools (MEXT, 2008b). This nationwide survey is conducted on samples of boys and girls from kindergarten, elementary school, junior high school and high school. In 2008, for example, the data were extracted from 1,350,000 elementary schoolchildren in 2,820 schools. development. The World Health Organization (WHO) collects and opens to the public data on refractive error or myopia in school-age children in some countries (WHO, 2009). The survey on the refractive errors of school-age children in the different populations in the same urban district in Malaysia could be confirmed in the WHO website. Age group examined in this survey was from 7 to 15 years old. The reported result concerned with Malaysia is that the prevalence % of myopia in Chinese population is 45.3 and 95% CI is 39.8-50.8. Contrary to this, prevalence % of myopia in Indian and Malay populations in Malaysia is 15.5 and 13.9, respectively. Additionally, prevalence % of myopia in school-age children in South China is 35.1 and 95% CI is 33.2-36.9. Saw et al. found that the prevalence of myopia was higher in the city than in the countryside among Chinese schoolchildren and concluded that the increased near-work activity might have contributed to the prevalence of myopia. (Saw et al., 2001, 2002). Garner et al. examined data on myopia obtained from groups of Sherpa and Tibetan children groups in Nepal (Garner et al., 1999). The prevalence of myopia in Sherpa children was low and their rural lifestyle appeared to be relatively unstressed. They indicated that Tibetan children have a higher prevalence of myopia than Sherpa children and more rigorous schooling, and that the rural lifestyle is at least compatible with a virtual absence of myopia. Musculoskeletal and ophthalmological aspects of ICT use in schools. The survey on the elementary schoolchildren revealed many ergonomics and postural problems. In the quantitative analysis of young students while studying, a significant correlation was found between visual and postural parameters (Marumoto et al., 1999). Figure 1 Increases in the ratio of myopic children in Japanese elementary schools (MEXT, 2008b). Figure 1 shows annual changes in the percentage of myopic children from 1980 to 2008 as revealed by MEXT surveys. In this survey, visual acuity is expressed in decimal digits, not in fraction. It is obvious from the Figure that the ratio of myopic children has increased year by year. In 2008, about 30% of elementary school children were myopic with visual acuity lower than 1.0, and 7.1% of children were myopic with visual acuity lower than 0.3. According to the MEXT data, the ratio of myopia increases with increases in the educational level; 53% of junior high school students and 58% of high school students are myopic with a visual acuity lower than 1.0. One of the most serious problems caused by inappropriate use of ICT in schools might be long-term effects on the visual system, such as myopia in children. Although the relationship between close work and myopia is still unclear (Mutti et al., 2002), special attention should be given to ergonomics in the ICT environments of children from the viewpoint of child Figure 2 A photo taken in a computer classroom of an elementary school in Tokyo. Short viewing distance and other ergonomics problems caused by use of inappropriate desks and chairs were found by postural analysis of the schoolchildren. From a postural analysis of 48 schoolchildren during ICT class, Akutsu at al. identified a number of ergonomics problems from visual and postural aspects such as too little distance between the eye and screen, decreased blinking rate, and the need for desks and chairs that better fit a child’s body including desks of an appropriate height and chairs with a footrest and backrest or body-support devices as shown in Figure 2 (Akutsu et al., 2001). Based on the quantitative analysis of postural parameters for schoolchildren while using computers, Akutsu et al. designed a computer workstation for schoolchildren, including a desk and chair as a prototype (Akutsu et al., 2001). The desk and chair was designed so that the child would maintain an appropriate viewing distance between the screen and eyes and support for the body would be provided, even for small children, with an adjustable backrest and footrest. The position of the footrest is mechanically linked to the position of the backrest to avoid the necessity for adjustments. This prototype of a workstation is designed to enable VDT operation with an adequate posture for 95% of the physiques of elementary school boys and girls using anthropometric data on the Japanese body size from ages 6 to 11 years. Our experimental study revealed a significant correlation between failing eyesight and postural parameters of young students while studying (Marumoto et al., 1999). The mean age of the 19 subjects was 13.2 years, and 9 were classified as emmetropic and 10 as myopic. Viewing distance, viewing angle, neck angle, vertical gaze direction, and ocular surface area while the subject was engaged in study were evaluated. The mean viewing distance and standard deviation of the myopic group was 15.0 cm±1.9 cm, which was significantly shorter than those of the emmetropic group (30.2 cm±4.1 cm). The shorter viewing distance implied poorer vision and a larger extent of deterioration of ocular accommodation. Neck angle, viewing angle, visual acuity, near point, and accommodative power were correlated with viewing distance (p<0.01). The most common visual problems encountered among young patients in an ophthalmologic clinic were studied with my colleagues. In this clinical case study, the proposed mechanisms for the deterioration of the children’s eyesight associated with the use of ICT tools such as mobile phones and electronic games are decreased accommodative power, increased anisometropia or the presence of unequal refractive error of the eyes, abnormality in convergence, and inadequate correction of refractive errors (Marumoto et al., 2003). ERGONOMICS CONSIDERATIONS RELATED TO ADVANCES IN DISPLAY TECHNOLOGY Large displays Large flat panel displays such as 19-inch liquid crystal display (LCD) monitors are superseding the conventional cathode ray tube (CRT) for various types of VDT work. The use of a large display is a welcome development for users because the larger size itself increases visual comfort by enlarging the user interface for information display. Especially, using complicated Kanji or Chinese characters requires an electronic display with high spatial resolution. On the other hand, a shorter viewing distance and increased angle of the upward gaze are inevitably required when large displays are placed on the top of traditional desks in comparison with the use of smaller displays. The need to gaze upward is well known as one of the most undesirable drawbacks of VDT work from the viewpoint of visual ergonomics (Taptagaporn and Saito, 1993; Fostervold and Ankrum, 2008). These disadvantages of using large screens are more serious for those with a small physique, such as schoolchildren. The average vertical eye position of VDT operators was found to be 7.5 deg upward from the horizontal plane or Frankfurt plane (Saito et al., 1993a). Contrary to this, visual tasks performed on a desk without a VDT permit a downward gaze that was 28.9 deg below the Frankfurt plane. Ergonomics problems with the use of a large screen that may cause serious physiological effects are summarized based on our experimental studies as follows: Constrained working posture. The experimental study by Villanueva et al. (1996, 1997) revealed that neck angle, thoracic bending and vertical gaze position were significantly affected by changes in screen height of the VDT. Prolonged use of a large display was considered to be a major cause of neck and eye disorders and subjective discomfort among VDT workers. Increase in the ocular surface area. The upper eyelid and eyeball move together in a physiologically synergic action during eye movement in the vertical direction (Saito, 1975; Saito et al., 1978). Consequently, upward gazing increases the ocular surface area (OSA) in proportion to the vertical eye positions (Sotoyama et al., 1995, 1996). An upward gaze of 10 deg above the horizontal plane was confirmed to increase the OSA by about 12%. In addition, the rate of tear evaporation per square centimeter increases with increases in OSA (Tsubota and Nakamori, 1993). These findings may account for the increased subjective complaints of dry eye or eye irritation among VDT operators. Shift in binocular vision; exophoria and dark vergence. It has been shown that the absolute average angle of exophoria during upward gazing was significantly larger than during lower gazing (Saito et al., 1993a). Moreover, dark vergence, measured as the binocular convergence distance in a completely dark room, was found to shift farther with an upward gaze while a nearer shift occurred with a downward gaze (Taptagaporn and Saito, 1993). Lowering the gaze position also reduces the physiological efforts in binocular vision. These characteristics of the oculo-motor system objectively demonstrate that upward gazing as occurs with the use of a larger screen may be physiologically more uncomfortable. The phenomena described above might cause physiological and ergonomics problems in VDT workers. Particularly, these disadvantages of using large screens are more serious for those with a small physique, such as schoolchildren. A questionnaire survey in schools indicates that most schools are slow to develop instructive programs from environmental and ergonomics viewpoints (Sotoyama et al., 2002). Rapid introduction of the notebook computer In 2008, notebook computer shipments exceeded for the first time shipments of desktop computers in the world market. Currently, using notebook computers in ICT classes in elementary schools is the usual case. The use of notebook computers in the workplace offers a number of advantages over desktop computers from ecological viewpoints. On the other hand, there are many visual ergonomics problems with the LCD, such as luminance contrast (Saito et al., 1993b; Kubota et al., 2006; Oetjen and Ziefle, 2009). In our previous experimental study, a positive type CRT, which has dark characters on a light background, was ascertained to be the most appropriate display (Taptagaporn and Saito, 1990; Saito et al., 1994), while working with an LCD was considered to be the least visually comfortable with the lowest accommodative velocity of the eye (Saito et al., 1993b). Although recent technology has greatly improved the picture quality of the LCD, the notebook computer has many ergonomics disadvantages for the user in terms of visual fatigue and constrained working posture (Saito et al., 1993b; Straker et al., 1997; Villanueva et al., 1998; Jonai et al., 2002). The distinctive working posture while using a notebook computer with a flat panel display (FPD) was observed to be a remarkably short viewing distance and a forward inclination of the trunk and head/neck with higher neck muscle activity as shown by electromyography (Jonai et. al., 1997; Villanueva et al., 1998; Saito et al., 1997). Moreover, the construction of the notebook computer contradicts the traditional ergonomics recommendations for VDT use. The lack of tilt and swivel mechanisms is an example of this oversight. Before introducing the notebook computer into schools, it is recommended that its ergonomics drawbacks be considered. To overcome these drawbacks, ergonomics guidelines for the use of notebook computers as issued by the JES and IEA/TC/Human-Computer Interaction provide good solutions for notebook computer users (Saito et al., 2000). Action checkpoints developed by Iwakiri et al. (2004) are also useful in making computer work comfortable, whether with notebook computers or desktop computers. TCO Development recommends in its documents for TCO’05 Notebooks 2.0 that those who use a notebook computer as a stationary unit at work should be able to connect them to external displays with good image quality, to external keyboards and to external pointing devices (mouse, digital pens, etc.) either as separate units or via docking stations (TCO’05, 2005; TCO’05 Position Paper, 2008). JES ERGONOMICS ROAD MAP At the turn of the century, JES identified and publicly announced important ergonomics issues for the 21st century, which subsequently evolved into the creation of the Ergonomics Road Map. With a view toward contributing to government policies and industrial research investment, JES presented the road map to the public in 2006 (Fujita et al., 2006). For information on the JES Road Map, visit the JES web site; (http://www.ergonomics.jp/senryaku/index.html). The current version of the JES Road Map consists of following important ergonomics issues: work environments and systems friendly to people, diversified needs in human life, safe and comfortable mobility or barrier-free environment, safe and healthy environments, good social communications, and establishment of an educational basis for ergonomics for children. In order to extend ergonomics knowledge to the general public including children and those working in schools, the JES council plans to develop an ergonomics education for elementary and junior high schools. The Ergonomics Road Map can be a very useful tool for ergonomics communities in terms of communicating with industry and policymakers and providing a beacon that intends to provide general orientation to academic research, industrial investment and an agenda for policies of ministries, etc. Among important issues identified in the map, establishment of an educational basis for ergonomics for children was emphasized. In addition to important issues in ergonomics such as a computer interface tailored for children, it was suggested in the road map that teaching ergonomics to children appears to be most critical, and no doubt it will be essential to the proliferation of ergonomics in the future in our society. Acknowledgments The author is grateful to the reviewers for their helpful comments, and would like to acknowledge the efforts of his colleagues for their contributions to the experimental studies and questionnaire surveys, some of which are referred to in this paper. References Akutsu, M., Yamamoto, M., Usui, K., Sakurai, T., Miyoshi, T., 2001. Creating a child-friendly computer environmentDevelopment of computer desk and chair for primary school children. Tamagawa Univ. Res. Review 7, 47-64. Bennett, C., 2000. Children, computers and classrooms. XIVth Triennial Congress of the International Ergonomics Association/44th Annual Meeting of the HFES, Proceedings, CD-ROM. Corlett, N., 2008. 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