4.7 Review

In pursuit of humanised order picking planning: methodological review, literature classification and input from practice

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PRODUCTION RESEARCH
Volume 61, Issue 10, Pages 3300-3330

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00207543.2022.2079437

Keywords

Logistics; warehouse operations management; human factors; literature review; multimethod approach; Industry 4; 0 and 5; 0

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Efficient order picking system is crucial for high-performing warehouses and human operators will continue to play a significant role. However, current planning models only partly consider the specific skills, conduct, and perceptions of human operators. This review adopts a multimethod approach to identify and analyze how these phenomena are integrated into order picking planning problems and provides recommendations for refining human factors integration constructs.
At the core of every high-performing warehouse is an efficient order picking (OP) system. To attain such a system, policy choices should be carefully aligned with subjects responsible for the actual picking within the established system. Despite recent advancements in automating the picking process due to Industry 4.0, human operators will continue to play a crucial role in the future of warehousing. However, unlike robots, human operators have specific skills, conduct, and perceptions, which are only partly accounted for in current planning models. This review adopts a multimethod approach to identify and analyse how these phenomena are currently integrated into OP planning problems. In addition, we assess the relevance and adequacy of human factors modelling in academic literature with practice-based insights gathered via semi-structured interviews. This leads to five major human factors integration constructs and dedicated recommendations on how to refine them. We then take the analysis one step further and make suggestions on how to integrate these constructs with leading research methodologies in the context of Industry 5.0. The results highlight the prevalent need to increasingly account for psychosocial phenomena and their impact on operational performance. Future research opportunities provide a substantiated foundation to assist in human-centric work design.

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