Open AccessBook
Human Factors Methods: A Practical Guide for Engineering and Design
Neville A. Stanton,Neville A. Stanton,Paul M. Salmon,Laura A. Rafferty,Guy H. Walker,Chris Baber +5 more
- 30 Jan 2006
852
TL;DR: The second edition of Human Factors Methods: A Practical Guide for Engineering and Design now presents 107 design and evaluation methods as well as numerous refinements to those that featured in the original.
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Abstract: This second edition of Human Factors Methods: A Practical Guide for Engineering and Design now presents 107 design and evaluation methods as well as numerous refinements to those that featured in the original. The book has been carefully designed to act as an ergonomics methods manual, aiding both students and practitioners. The eleven sections represent the different categories of ergonomics methods and techniques that can be used in the evaluation and design process. Offering a 'how-to' text on a substantial range of ergonomics methods that can be used in the design and evaluation of products and systems, it is a comprehensive point of reference for all these methods. An overview of the methods is presented in chapter one, with a methods matrix showing which can be used in conjunction. The following chapters detail the methods showing how to apply them in practice. Flowcharts, procedures and examples cover the requirements of a diverse audience and varied applications of the methods. The final chapter, a new addition, illustrates the EAST method, which integrates several well-known methods into a teamwork analysis approach.
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Citations
The Design with Intent Method: a design tool for influencing user behaviour.
TL;DR: The Design with Intent Method is illustrated via application to an everyday human-technology interaction problem: reducing the likelihood of a customer leaving his or her card in an automatic teller machine, demonstrating that the method has potential for development and application as part of a user-centred design process.
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The Oxford NOTECHS System: reliability and validity of a tool for measuring teamwork behaviour in the operating theatre
TL;DR: The Oxford NOTECHS scale appears to be a reliable and valid instrument for assessing teamwork in the operating theatre, and is ready for further application.
382
What really is going on? Review of situation awareness models for individuals and teams
Paul M. Salmon,Neville A. Stanton,Guy H. Walker,Chris Baber,Daniel P Jenkins,Richard McMaster,Mark S. Young +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, a review and critique of what is currently known about situation awareness and team SA is presented, including a comparison of the most prominent individual and team models presented in the literature.
378
Measuring Situation Awareness in complex systems: Comparison of measures study
Paul M. Salmon,Neville A. Stanton,Guy H. Walker,Daniel P Jenkins,Darshna Ladva,Laura Rafferty,Mark S. Young +6 more
- 01 May 2009
TL;DR: In this paper, a study was conducted to compare two different situation awareness measures (a freeze probe recall approach and a post trial subjective rating approach) when used to assess participant situation awareness during a military planning task.
Robust solutions to Stackelberg games
TL;DR: A new mixed-integer linear program (MILP) for Stackelberg games to consider human adversaries is introduced, incorporating: (i) novel anchoring theories on human perception of probability distributions and (ii) robustness approaches for MILPs to address human imprecision.
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