Technical Report


Book Description




Advances in Human Aspects of Transportation: Part II


Book Description

Human Factors and Ergonomics have made a considerable contribution to the research, design, development, operation and analysis of transportation systems which includes road and rail vehicles and their complementary infrastructure, aviation and maritime transportation. This book presents recent advances in the Human Factors aspects of Transportation. These advances include accident analysis, automation of vehicles, comfort, distraction of drivers (understanding of distraction and how to avoid it), environmental concerns, in-vehicle systems design, intelligent transport systems, methodological developments, new systems and technology, observational and case studies, safety, situation awareness, skill development and training, warnings and workload. This book brings together the most recent human factors work in the transportation domain, including empirical research, human performance and other types of modeling, analysis, and development. The issues facing engineers, scientists, and other practitioners of human factors in transportation research are becoming more challenging and more critical. The common theme across these sections is that they deal with the intersection of the human and the system. Moreover, many of the chapter topics cross section boundaries, for instance by focusing on function allocation in NextGen or on the safety benefits of a tower controller tool. This is in keeping with the systemic nature of the problems facing human factors experts in rail and road, aviation and maritime research– it is becoming increasingly important to view problems not as isolated issues that can be extracted from the system environment, but as embedded issues that can only be understood as a part of an overall system.







Handbook of Research on Web Log Analysis


Book Description

"This book reflects on the multifaceted themes of Web use and presents various approaches to log analysis"--Provided by publisher.







Computing Skills and the User Interface


Book Description

Part I. The needs of computer users. Communicating with university computers users: a case study. University computer users: characteristics and behaviour. The needs of the commercial user. Part II. The nature and acquisition of computing skills. Teaching novices programming. Comprehending and debugging computer programs. The art of notation. When do diagrams make good computer languages? Acquiring a first computer language: a study of individual differences. Generating a programming environment for learners. Part III. The design of the user interface. The user interface: how we may compute. Design procedures for user involvement and user support. Adaptive man-computer interfaces. The design of an adaptable terminal. Empirical and formal methods for the study of computer editors.




Human Factors in Computer Systems


Book Description

Based on an extensive literature survey, this document presents a description and critical analysis of the state of the art in the area of human factors in computer systems. This review is concerned both with the status of human factors research in the area of user computer interaction and with the current state of user-computer interaction technology and practices. The primary purpose of the review is to determine whether research and practice in this area have evolved sufficiently to support the development of a human factors guide to computer system design. It is concluded that insufficient data exist for the development of a 'quantitative reference handbook' in this area, but that a 'human factors design guide' -- which discusses issues, alternatives, and methods in the context of the design process -- is both feasible and needed. (Author).




MIS Research


Book Description




Information Bulletin


Book Description