Papers from the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 53rd Annual Meeting

November 20, 2009 by Eric Shaver · Leave a Comment
Filed under: HFES, ergonomics, health care, human factors, research, robots 

I recently received, and started reviewing, the Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 53rd Annual Meeting (2009).  As always, there’s a wide variety of research topics covered.  Some of the more interesting papers I’ve reviewed so far include:

Teams

  • Developing a Subjective Shared Situation Awareness Inventory for Teams
  • Overcoming Bias in the Deliberations of Distributed Teams
  • Supporting Expertise Coordination in Multidisciplinary Project Teams
  • Team Cognition and External Representations: A Framework and Propositions for Supporting Collaborative Problem Solving

Safety

  • Considering Trends among Industrial Accidents: A Preliminary Meta Analysis of HFACS Causal Factors across Industries

Education

  • Evaluating and Designing Education: A Collaborative Effort Between Educators and Ergonomists
  • Macroergonomics in Education: On Your Mark, Set, GO!

Health Care

  • Healthcare Workers’ Perceptions of Information in the Electronic Health Record
  • Medical Informatics: What contributions can human factors make?
  • Improving the User Interface and Adoption of Online Personal Health Records
  • Improving Communication of Health Status Information
  • Development of an Integrated Model for Predicting Patient Compliance
  • A Holistic Human Factors Evaluation Framework for the Design of Consumer Health Informatics Interventions

Human-Robot Interaction

Interested readers can see the complete table of contents here (270 KB, .pdf).  Also, you can purchase a copy of the CD directly from HFES.

Finally, if you’re interested in learning more about the latest conference, visit the Human Factors Blog  for a six-part review: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, and Part 6.

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