Abstract:
The construction industry is known to be one of the most accident-prone of work sectors around the globe.
Although the construction output is less in Sri Lanka, compared to developed countries in general, the
magnitude of the accident rate in the construction industry is still significantly high. Most of the
occupational accidents are due to the unsafe behaviour of the workers. Thus, studying the people-related
factor in safety is an effective way to manage safety at work sites. This is a concept gaining more interest
across industry sectors globally, and has the great advantage of needing the involvement of the individual
employees. The paper therefore focused to investigate the factors influencing construction workers’ unsafe
behaviours and develop a model to predict unsafe behaviours based on those factors. The factors affecting
construction workers’ unsafe behaviour were identified through literature survey. Expert interviews were
carried out to validate and generalize the factors found in literature, to the Sri Lankan context. Survey
approach was used to collect data and the processed data were used to develop and train an Artificial
Neural Network (ANN) model to predict unsafe behaviour of a construction worker. Then training and
validation of the developed model under 7 design parameters was carried out using the data on influential
factors of unsafe behaviour of 284 construction workers of C1 Building Construction sector. The data were
applied to the backpropagation algorithm to attain the optimal ANN Architectures. The findings depict that
the success of an ANN is very sensitive to parameters selected in the training process gaining good
generalization capabilities in validation session. The model can be used to determine the unsafe behaviour
level of construction workers and their safety training needs.
Citation:
Manjula, N.H.C., & De Silva, N. (2017). Predicting unsafe behaviour of construction workers. In Y.G. Sandanayake, T. Ramachandra & S. Gunatilake (Eds.), What’s new and what’s next in the built environment sustainability agenda? (pp. 326-336). Ceylon Institute of Builders. https://ciobwcs.com/downloads/WCS2017-Proceedings.pdf