Yan Jingjing, He Gengen, Basiri Anahid, Hancock Craig, Yeboah Siegfried K
International Exchange College, Ningbo University of Technology, Ningbo 315211, China.
International Doctoral Innovation Centre, University of Nottingham, Ningbo 315100, China.
Sensors (Basel). 2024 Feb 21;24(5):1378. doi: 10.3390/s24051378.
Walking speed is a significant aspect of evacuation efficiency, and this speed varies during fire emergencies due to individual physical abilities. However, in evacuations, it is not always possible to keep an upright posture, hence atypical postures, such as stoop walking or crawling, may be required for survival. In this study, a novel 3D passive vision-aided inertial system (3D PVINS) for indoor positioning was used to track the movement of 20 volunteers during an evacuation in a low visibility environment. Participants' walking speeds using trunk flexion, trunk-knee flexion, and upright postures were measured. The investigations were carried out under emergency and non-emergency scenarios in vertical and horizontal directions, respectively. Results show that different moving directions led to a roughly 43.90% speed reduction, while posture accounted for over 17%. Gender, one of the key categories in evacuation models, accounted for less than 10% of the differences in speed. The speeds of participants under emergency scenarios when compared to non-emergency scenarios was also found to increase by 53.92-60% when moving in the horizontal direction, and by about 48.28-50% when moving in the vertical direction and descending downstairs. Our results also support the social force theory of the warming-up period, as well as the effect of panic on the facilitating occupants' moving speed.
步行速度是疏散效率的一个重要方面,在火灾紧急情况下,由于个人身体能力的不同,步行速度会有所变化。然而,在疏散过程中,人们并不总是能够保持直立姿势,因此为了生存可能需要采取非典型姿势,如弯腰行走或爬行。在本研究中,一种用于室内定位的新型三维被动视觉辅助惯性系统(3D PVINS)被用来跟踪20名志愿者在低能见度环境下疏散时的运动。测量了参与者采用躯干弯曲、躯干-膝盖弯曲和直立姿势时的步行速度。分别在紧急和非紧急场景下,在垂直和水平方向上进行了调查。结果表明,不同的移动方向导致速度降低约43.90%,而姿势造成的速度降低超过17%。性别作为疏散模型中的关键类别之一,其造成的速度差异不到10%。研究还发现,与非紧急场景相比,参与者在紧急场景下水平移动时速度提高了53.92 - 60%,垂直移动和下楼时速度提高了约48.28 - 50%。我们的研究结果还支持了热身期的社会力理论,以及恐慌对加快居住者移动速度的影响。