An association rule mining model for evaluating the potential correlation of construction cross operation risk

Chen, Q; Tian, Z; Lei, T and Huang, S (2023) An association rule mining model for evaluating the potential correlation of construction cross operation risk. Engineering, Construction and Architectural Management, 30(10), pp. 5109-5132. ISSN 09699988

Abstract

Purpose: Cross operation is a common operation method in the building construction process nowadays. Due to the crossover, each other's operations are disturbed, and risks also interact. This superimposed relationship of risks is worthy of attention. The study aims to develop a model for analyzing cross-working risks. This model can quantify the correlation of various risk factors. Design/methodology/approach: The concept of cross operation and the cross types involved are clarified. The risk factors were extracted from cross-operation accidents. The association rule mining (ARM) was used to analyze the results of various cross-types accidents. With the help of visualization tools, the intensity distribution and correlation path of the relationship between each factor were obtained. A complete cross-operation risk analysis model was established. Findings: The application of ARM method proves that there are obvious risk correlation deviations in different types of cross operations. A high-frequency risk common to all cross operations is on-site safety inspection and process supervision, but the subsequent problems are different. Cutting off the high-lift risk chain timely according to the results obtained by ARM can reduce or eliminate the danger of high-frequency risk factors. Originality/value: This is the first systematic analysis of cross-work risk in the construction. The study determined the priority of risk management. The results contribute to targeted cross-work control to reduce accidents caused by cross-work.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: accident causes; association rules; construction safety; cross operation; data mining
Date Deposited: 11 Apr 2025 15:12
Last Modified: 11 Apr 2025 15:12