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09 HFES AM Program,r7.qxd - Human Factors and Ergonomics ...

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Volume 5JustReleased!The <strong>HFES</strong> annual series, Reviewsof <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Ergonomics</strong>,condenses HF/E knowledge in specificsubject areas into a form thatprovides readers with a comprehensiveunderst<strong>and</strong>ing of each topic — its current state, importantnew research findings <strong>and</strong> technology, <strong>and</strong> current issues <strong>and</strong> researchneeds. Chapters note ways in which research results informtheory or methdology for future research <strong>and</strong> also emphasize thepractical implications of the research that is reviewed. Chapterauthors are among the most prominent HF/E professionals in theirrespective subject areas. Reviews volumes are broader in scopethan h<strong>and</strong>books <strong>and</strong> deeper in detail than encyclopedias. They aredesigned to inform both researchers <strong>and</strong> practitioners. All chaptersinclude extensive references.Volume 5 ContentsPreface: Use-Inspired Basic Research – Francis T. DursoChapter 1. Performance in Nursing – Patricia R. DeLucia, Tammy E. Ott, & Patrick A. PalmieriChapter 2. <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> of Information Visualization – George Robertson, Mary Czerwinski,Danyel Fisher, & Bongshin LeeChapter 3. Aviation Automation: General Perspectives <strong>and</strong> Specific Guidance for theDesign of Modes <strong>and</strong> Alerts – Amy R. PritchettChapter 4. Intercepting Moving Objects: Fundamental Principles Learned From Baseball –Rob GrayChapter 5. Expertise: Acquisition, Limitations, <strong>and</strong> Control – Stephan Lew<strong>and</strong>owsky &Jacqueline L. ThomasChapter 6. Principles for Designing Effective <strong>and</strong> Efficient Training of Complex CognitiveSkills – Fred Paas & Tamara van GogChapter 7. Augmented Cognition: An Overview – Kay Stanney, Dylan Schmorrow,Matthew Johnston, Sven Fuchs, David Jones, Kelly Hale, Ali Ahmad, & Peter YoungChapter 8. <strong>Human</strong> Performance Modeling – Michael Byrne & Richard PewAbout the AuthorsIndexPrint only or online only: $75 <strong>HFES</strong> members, $85 nonmembers, plus $10US shipping/h<strong>and</strong>ling, CA sales tax if applicablePrint plus online: $100 <strong>HFES</strong> members, $115 nonmembersPurchase Volumes 1–4 <strong>and</strong> save $$!Save 20%–25% on this four-volume set (print only):$240 <strong>HFES</strong> members, $255 nonmembersContents ofPast Volumes:Volume 4 – C. Melody Carswell, EditorISBN 978-0-945289-31-9, 2008, 310 pp.Preface – CarswellSpatial Mental Representation: Implications for NavigationSystem Design – Taylor, Brunyé, & TaylorDigital <strong>Human</strong> Modeling for Workspace Design – ChaffinForensic <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>: People, Places, Products – Zackowitz &VredenburghH<strong>and</strong>held Digital Devices – Lewis, Commarford, Kennedy, &SadowskiHaptic Interaction: Design for Everyday Interfaces – MacLeanAir Traffic Control – Durso & ManningOffice <strong>Ergonomics</strong>: A Review of Pertinent Research <strong>and</strong> RecentDevelopments – Br<strong>and</strong>Volume 3 – Deborah A. Boehm-Davis, EditorISBN 978-0-945289-28-9, 2007, 210 pp.Analysis of Cognitive Work – Bisantz & RothMacroergonomics: The Analysis <strong>and</strong> Design of Work Systems –Hendrick<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> of Homel<strong>and</strong> Security – Cooke & WinnerTask Interruptions – Trafton & MonkResearch-Based Guidelines for Multimedia Instruction – MayerRailroad <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> – Sussman & RaslearVolume 2 – Robert C. Williges, EditorISBN 0-945289-27-8, 2006, 300 pp.Situation Awareness Catches On: What? So What? Now What? –Tenney & PewCrew Resource Management Training Research, Practice, <strong>and</strong>Lessons Learned – Salas, Wilson, Burke, Wightman, & HowseRepresentation Aiding to Support Performance on Problem-Solving Tasks – Smith, Bennett, & StoneUsability Assessment Methods – Dumas & SalzmanSatisfying Divergent Needs in User-Centered Computing:Accounting for Varied Levels of Visual Function – Jacko &LeonardMultidimensional Aspects of Slips <strong>and</strong> Falls – Gielo-Perczak,Maynard, & DiDomenicoProtection <strong>and</strong> Enhancement of Hearing in Noise – Casali &GergesDesigning Effective Warnings – Laughery & WogalterVolume 1 – Raymond S. Nickerson, EditorISBN 0-945289-25-1, 2005, 318 pp.Biomechanical Modeling – Marras & Radwin<strong>Human</strong>-Automation Interaction – Sheridan & ParasuramanTechnology <strong>and</strong> Aging – Rogers, Stronge, & FiskDriving Safety – LeeImproving Product Safety <strong>and</strong> Effectiveness in the Home –Boehm-DavisReducing <strong>and</strong> Mitigating <strong>Human</strong> Error in Medicine – Morrow,North, & WickensOrder online at http://hfes.org/Publications or send order <strong>and</strong> payment to<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Ergonomics</strong> Society, P.O. Box 1369, Santa Monica, CA 90406-1369 USA310/394-1811, Fax 310/394-2410, store@hfes.org.


TECHNICAL PROGR<strong>AM</strong> COMMITTEEChairCheryl A. BolstadWorkshopsMichelle L. RogersSpecial SessionsRonald L. BoringPostersRaegan HoeftGuest LecturesMichael J. KalsherQualityMarc L. ResnickStudent ForumS<strong>and</strong>ra K. GarrettGeneral SessionsSheryl L. ChappellCleotilde GonzalezPROGR<strong>AM</strong> CHAIRS FOR THE 53RD ANNUAL MEETINGAerospace SystemsDaniel G. MorrowAgingAnne C. McLaughlinAugmented CognitionCali FidopiastisCognitive Engineering &Decision MakingAnn M. BisantzCommunicationsAaron W. BangorComputer SystemsDouglas L. GardnerEducationTerence S. AndreEnvironmental DesignKaren JacobsForensics ProfessionalTonya L. Smith-JacksonHealth CareAyse P. Gurses<strong>Human</strong> Performance ModelingDario D. SalvucciIndividual Differences inPerformanceTiffany S. JastrzembskiIndustrial <strong>Ergonomics</strong>Richard W. MarklinInternetMarc L. ResnickMacroergonomicsNancy L. J. LarsonPerception <strong>and</strong> PerformanceKeith JonesProduct DesignFarheen KhanSafetyMary F. LeschSurface TransportationLouis TijerinaSystem DevelopmentDennis WhiteTest <strong>and</strong> EvaluationRebecca A. GrierTrainingCamilla C. KnottVirtual EnvironmentsJason S. AugustynHUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIETY 53RD ANNUAL MEETINGi


53RD ANNUAL MEETING HOST COMMITTEEChairBarry P. GoettlTechnical ToursValerie J. RiceNewsletterAllyson R. HallPublic RelationsAdrian O. SalinasHospitalityJames MillerStudent VolunteersCoordinatorsJohn R. MorrisFelix PortnoyHUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIETY OFFICERSPresidentPaul A. GreenPresident-ElectKathleen MosierImmediate Past PresidentJohn F. (“Jeff”) KelleySecretary-TreasurerAndrew S. ImadaSecretary-Treasurer-ElectScott A. ShappellImmediate Past Secretary-TreasurerValerie J. GawronExecutive CouncilAt-Large MembersNancy J. CookeFrancis T. DursoM. Susan HallbeckEduardo SalasRonald G. ShapiroCarol Stuart-Buttle<strong>HFES</strong> STAFFExecutive DirectorLynn Strother, CAEAdministrative AssistantSusan MarschnerCommunications DirectorLois SmithProduction EditorScott MacDonaldEditorial Review CoordinatorAndrea TomcsanyiMember Services DirectorCarlos de FallaMember ServicesCoordinatorStefanie Alex<strong>and</strong>eriiHUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIETY 53RD ANNUAL MEETING


20<strong>09</strong> SUSTAINING MEMBERS OF THEHUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIETYDI<strong>AM</strong>ONDVRC CorporationDonald VreulsPLATINUMAptima, Inc.Daniel Serfaty<strong>Human</strong>Centric Technologies, Inc.Barry H. BeithSILVERAnacapa Sciences, Inc.Douglas H. HarrisDSO National LaboratoriesYing Meng FaiExponent Failure Analysis Associates, Inc.Roger L. McCarthyHayes + AssociatesWilson C. HayesU. S. Army Research LaboratorySuzanne Foppiano53RD ANNUAL MEETING SPONSORS<strong>HFES</strong> Council of Technical GroupsStudent ReceptionAerospace Systems Technical GroupCognitive Engineering <strong>and</strong> Decision Making Technical GroupComputer Systems Technical GroupIndustrial <strong>Ergonomics</strong> Technical GroupMacroergonomics Technical GroupPerception & Performance Technical GroupSafety Technical GroupStudent Lounge<strong>Human</strong> Performance Modeling Technical GroupProduct Design Technical GroupU.S. Border PatrolMentor-Mentee LuncheonsHUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIETY 53RD ANNUAL MEETINGiii


EXHIBITORS(As of September 15, 20<strong>09</strong>)Alion Science & Technology . . . . . Booth 24Applied <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>, Inc. . . Tabletop 11Ashgate Publishing Company. . . . Booth 10Board of Certification in Professional<strong>Ergonomics</strong> (BCPE) . . . . . . . Tabletop 8ErgoGenesis, LLC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 1<strong>HFES</strong> Institute. . . . . . . . . . . . Booths 27–28Userzoom/Key LimeInteractive. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tabletop 12LC Technologies/EyegazeSystems. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tabletop 7NASA Ames ResearchCenter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booths 3–4The National Academies: Committee on<strong>Human</strong>-Systems Integration . . Booth 15Neutral Posture, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 6Noldus Information Technology. . . Booth 5SAGE Publications . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 12Seeing Machines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 23SensoMotoric Instruments . . . . . . Booth 19Smart Eye . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 26Taylor & Francis Group . . . . Booths 16–18Tobii Technology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 11University of Michigan . . . . . . . . Tabletop 1Plan to attend:<strong>HFES</strong> 54thAnnual MeetingSeptember 27–October 1, 2010Hyatt Regency EmbarcaderoSan Francisco, California, USACONTENTSRegistration & FacilitiesMeeting Facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Registration Desk Location <strong>and</strong> Hours 1On-Site Event Tickets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Locator File . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Room Capacity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Nonsmoking Policy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Pagers <strong>and</strong> Cell Phones . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Refreshments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Resources<strong>HFES</strong> Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Career Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Job Notices at the Annual Meeting. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Internet Café . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1Newsletter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Student Lounge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Birds of a Feather Room . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Audiovisual Preview Room . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Volunteers Assignment Room . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Proceedings CD-ROM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2ExhibitsLocation <strong>and</strong> Hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Prize Drawings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Events<strong>Human</strong> Performance in Extreme Environments7th Annual Meeting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Student Career <strong>and</strong> Professional Development Day. . . 2First-Timers Reception . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2Mentor-Mentee Luncheons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3Student Reception . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3National <strong>Ergonomics</strong> Month Event . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3<strong>Program</strong> RemindersPoster Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3University Lab Posters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3Annual Meeting Survey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3Audiotaping <strong>and</strong> Videotaping Policies 3Meetings <strong>and</strong> ToursCommittee Meetings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3Technical Group Business Meetings 4Social Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5Technical Tours. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5Technical <strong>Program</strong>Workshops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6Forums . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7Technical Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8<strong>Program</strong> at a Glance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Center spreadParticipant Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40Personal Planner. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45Advertisers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46Facility Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50ivHUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIETY 53RD ANNUAL MEETING


REGISTRATION &FACILITIESMeeting FacilitiesAll Annual Meeting functions (other than tours) willbe held at the Gr<strong>and</strong> Hyatt San Antonio on LevelsTwo, Three, <strong>and</strong> Four. A map of the meeting spacemay be found on the inside back cover of this program<strong>and</strong> is displayed on signs throughout the hotel.Registration Desk Location <strong>and</strong> HoursAll persons attending workshops, technical sessions,tours, receptions, <strong>and</strong> other events, as well as theirguests, must wear their registration badges. Attendees<strong>and</strong> guests may register for Annual Meeting events atthe Registration Counter on Level Two.Registration is open during the following hours:SundayMonday & TuesdayWednesdayThursdayFriday3:00 to 6:00 p.m.7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noonOn-Site Event TicketsFor tours <strong>and</strong> events not sold out in advance, ticketsmay be purchased at the Registration Counter duringregistration hours. No waiting lists will be established;tickets will be sold on a first-come, first-served basis.Locator FileA list of meeting registrants is available at the RegistrationCounter.Room CapacityRoom selection for sessions is based on estimatedattendance <strong>and</strong> facility restrictions. All efforts havebeen made to ensure that room capacity is adequate.Nonsmoking PolicySmoking is not permitted inside the Gr<strong>and</strong> Hyatt SanAntonio or on technical tours.Pagers <strong>and</strong> Cell PhonesPlease turn off or mute all pagers <strong>and</strong> cell phones whileattending sessions.RefreshmentsBeverage breaks will take place each morning(10:00–10:30) <strong>and</strong> afternoon (3:00–3:30). On Mondaymorning <strong>and</strong> afternoon, Tuesday morning, <strong>and</strong> Fridaymorning, beverage breaks will be held adjacent tomeeting rooms. The Exhibit Hall (Lone Star BallroomA–C, Level Two) will be the location for the afternoonbreak on Tuesday <strong>and</strong> for both morning <strong>and</strong>afternoon breaks on Wednesday <strong>and</strong> Thursday.RESOURCES<strong>HFES</strong> CentralStaff from the <strong>HFES</strong> central office will be present atan information counter on Level Two near the RegistrationCounter to provide information on membership,publications, <strong>and</strong> services. Nonmembers who submitapplications <strong>and</strong> payment on site are entitled to themember price on all orders <strong>and</strong> purchases made at themeeting.Career CenterThe Career Center is located in the Lone Star BallroomF (Level Two) <strong>and</strong> is open the following hours:MondayTuesday & WednesdayThursday1:00 to 6:00 p.m.8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Subscribers to the <strong>HFES</strong> online Career Center mayreserve booths <strong>and</strong>/or tables at the on-site CareerCenter, subject to availability. If you have not alreadyreserved space, you may sign up at the Career Center.The scheduling of formal or informal interviews atthe Annual Meeting is the sole responsibility of theemployer.<strong>HFES</strong> members: You may post your résumé in theonline Career Center free of charge. Visit hfes.org <strong>and</strong>click “Career Center.”Job Notices at the Annual Meeting<strong>HFES</strong> will collect résumés for companies with a jobposting in the Career Center but not interviewing atthe Annual Meeting. The charge for this service is $150.Organizations not interviewing in the Career Centeror collecting résumés during the meeting may post a“for information only” job notice at the on-site CareerCenter for a $100 fee. Job seekers will be directed tosend their résumés directly to the organization advertisingthe job.Any company that wishes to post a job in the on-siteCareer Center, has no plans to interview, but wants<strong>HFES</strong> to collect résumés to be mailed to them afterthe meeting can do so for a charge of $150.Internet CaféComputers with Internet access will be availableon Level Two during the following hours: Sunday,3:00–6:00 p.m.; Monday <strong>and</strong> Tuesday, 7:00 a.m.–6:00p.m.; Wednesday <strong>and</strong> Thursday, 7:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m.<strong>and</strong> Friday, 7:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. A time limit of 10minutes per attendee will be enforced.GeneralInformationGENERAL INFORMATION 1


GeneralInformationCork message boards will also be available for postinghard-copy messages <strong>and</strong> meeting <strong>and</strong> event announcements.NewsletterThe daily newsletter, Riverwalk Tribune, containingimportant information about the meeting program<strong>and</strong> events, is available in the registration area, CareerCenter, Exhibit Hall, <strong>and</strong> various other locations onLevels Two, Three, <strong>and</strong> Four. Articles or news itemsmay be dropped off at the Registration Counter. Thenewsletter editorial office is located in Crockett A(Level Four).Student LoungeThe Student Lounge, located in Crockett B (LevelFour), has been set aside for students to meet, network,socialize, participate in special student activities,<strong>and</strong> relax. Hours are Monday through Thursday, 8:00a.m. to 7:00 p.m., <strong>and</strong> Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon.<strong>HFES</strong> thanks the Technical Groups listed on page iiifor their sponsorship.Birds of a Feather RoomThe Goliad room (Level Two) has been set asideMonday through Thursday from 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.<strong>and</strong> on Friday from 7:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon for individualswith mutual interests to discuss pertinent topicsor conduct meetings. A sign-up sheet is provided atthe room for advance reservations. Meeting times areallocated on a first-come, first-served basis, althougha few meetings have been prereserved.Audiovisual Preview RoomCrockett C (Level Four) has been reserved for presenterswho wish to preview their audiovisual materials.Computers will be available for AV preview only. Previewhours on Monday–Thursday are 7:00 a.m. to6:00 p.m. <strong>and</strong> on Friday from 7:00 a.m. to noon.Volunteers Assignment RoomStudent volunteers who have been assigned dutiesshould check in with Volunteers Coordinators JohnMorris <strong>and</strong> Felix Portnoy in the Independence room(Level Three).Proceedings CD-ROMAll registered attendees have been provided with aCD-ROM containing the proceedings. Workstationsare available in the Internet Café near the RegistrationCounter for viewing the CD-ROM <strong>and</strong> printingout individual papers. If supplies allow, additionalCD-ROMs may also be purchased at <strong>HFES</strong> Central.EXHIBITSLocation <strong>and</strong> HoursAll attendees are encouraged to visit the exhibits,located in Lone Star Ballroom A–C (Level Two).Coffee breaks will be held in the Exhibit Hall onTuesday afternoon <strong>and</strong> on Wednesday <strong>and</strong> Thursdaymorning <strong>and</strong> afternoon.Exhibition hours are as follows:TuesdayWednesdayThursday3:00–6:00 p.m.9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.9:00 a.m.–3:30 p.m.Exhibitor ListThe list of exhibitors appears on page iv.Prize Drawings<strong>HFES</strong> will be giving away two 2010 membershiprenewals <strong>and</strong> two registrations for the 54th AnnualMeeting in San Francisco, California, September 27–October 1, 2010. To enter a drawing to win these prizes,fill out the entry slips found in your portfolio bag <strong>and</strong>deposit them in the appropriate box inside the mainentrance of the Exhibit Hall. In addition, some exhibitorswill be offering prizes for the drawing; entry slipsfor these prizes may be obtained at each participatingexhibitor’s booth. Names of winners will be posted ona sign in the Exhibit Hall. You must be present at themeeting to claim your prize. Prizes are not transferable<strong>and</strong> must be claimed by 3:00 p.m. on Thursday, October22.EVENTS<strong>Human</strong> Performance in ExtremeEnvironments 7th Annual MeetingThe HPEE meeting sessions will be held on Sunday<strong>and</strong> Monday in Bonham D (Level Three).Student Career <strong>and</strong> ProfessionalDevelopment DayThe <strong>HFES</strong> Student Affairs Committee is pleasedto offer a special day devoted to events of interest tostudents, in Lone Star Ballroom E (Level Two). Seepage 7 for a schedule of presentations.First-Timers ReceptionIf this is your first <strong>HFES</strong> Annual Meeting, you’reinvited to attend a reception on Monday, October 19,from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. in Texas Ballroom D (LevelFour), just prior to the Gala Opening Reception.Come <strong>and</strong> meet Society leaders as you enjoy lightrefreshments.2 GENERAL INFORMATION


Mentor-Mentee LuncheonsA series of mentor-mentee luncheons will be heldduring the meeting to provide students <strong>and</strong> earlycareer<strong>and</strong> transitional professionals with information<strong>and</strong> opportunities to develop mentoring relationshipswith established professionals in the HF/E field.<strong>HFES</strong> thanks our sponsors (see page iii).The luncheons will be held from 12:00 noon to 1:30p.m. on Tuesday, Wednesday, <strong>and</strong> Thursday, October20–22.Complimentary lunch will be provided to all attendeeswho reserved a space with Haydee Cuevas prior to theAnnual Meeting. The mentor-mentee lunch sessionswill be held each day at Achiote Restaurant – PrivateDining Room (Level One).Student ReceptionAll students attending the Annual Meeting are invitedto a reception on Tuesday, October 20, from 5:00 to6:00 p.m. in Texas Ballroom A (Level Four). Snacks<strong>and</strong> soft drinks will be provided along with a no-hostbar. The reception is sponsored by the <strong>HFES</strong> Councilof Technical Groups.National <strong>Ergonomics</strong> Month EventAll attendees <strong>and</strong> their guests <strong>and</strong> families are invitedto attend the 20<strong>09</strong> <strong>HFES</strong> National <strong>Ergonomics</strong> Monthevent on Monday, October 19, from 4:45 to 6:15 p.m.,in Lone Star Ballroom E (Level Two).PROGR<strong>AM</strong> REMINDERSPoster SessionsPosters are available for viewing in the Lone Star BallroomCorridor (Level Two) in three 90-minute sessions:Tuesday, Wednesday, <strong>and</strong> Thursday. See the programschedule on the following pages for lists of the postersto be presented.University Lab PostersUniversity lab posters will be on display in the postershall on Tuesday <strong>and</strong> Thursday from 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.See pages 13 <strong>and</strong> 31–32 for the list of labs on display.Annual Meeting SurveyThe Annual Meeting Survey will be sent via e-mailto all attendees immediately after the meeting. Pleasewatch your e-mail for the link to the survey.Audiotaping <strong>and</strong> Videotaping PoliciesAttendees are not permitted to audiotape or videotapeany session without prior permission from the <strong>Human</strong><strong>Factors</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Ergonomics</strong> Society <strong>and</strong> all speakers participatingin the session. Permission forms are availableat <strong>HFES</strong> Central (Level Two). Please complete a formfor each presentation you wish to tape, obtain thespeaker(s)’ signature(s), <strong>and</strong> return it to <strong>HFES</strong> Central.MEETINGS ANDTOURSCommittee MeetingsSaturday, October 17<strong>HFES</strong> Executive CouncilSeguin (Level Four)8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Sunday, October 18<strong>HFES</strong> Executive CouncilSeguin (Level Four)8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.<strong>Human</strong> Performance in Extreme Environments7th Annual MeetingBonham D (Level Three)9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.ISO/TC 159/SC5/WG4Crockett D (Level Four)9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noonISO/TC 159/SC5/WG5Crockett D (Level Four)1:00 to 5:00 p.m.Monday, October 19ISO/TC 159/SC5/WG5Crockett D (Level Four)9:00 to 11:00 a.m.<strong>Human</strong> Performance in Extreme Environments7th Annual MeetingBonham D (Level Three)9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.ISO/TC 159/SC5Crockett D (Level Four)11:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Technical Group Newsletter EditorsMission B (Level Two)1:30 to 2:30 p.m.Council of Technical GroupsLone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)3:30 to 5:00 p.m.GeneralInformationGENERAL INFORMATION 3


GeneralInformationTuesday, October 20<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> St<strong>and</strong>ardization Working GroupBonham D (Level Three)10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> Editorial BoardTexas Ballroom A (Level Four)12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. (lunch)Local Chapter PresidentsBonham E (Level Three)12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. (lunch)U.S. TAG to ISO/TC 159/SC4Bonham D (Level Three)1:30 to 5:00 p.m.<strong>HFES</strong> Business MeetingRepublic B (Level Four)6:00 to 7:00 p.m.BCPE ReceptionTexas Ballroom B (Level Four)7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.Wednesday, October 21<strong>HFES</strong> Publications CommitteeCrockett D (Level Four)7:15 to 8:15 a.m. (breakfast)<strong>HFES</strong> Awards CommitteeMission B (Level Two)7:15 to 8:30 a.m.<strong>HFES</strong> 100 CommitteeBowie C (Level Two)8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.<strong>HFES</strong> Institute Board of SupervisorsBonham D (Level Three)8:30 to 10:00 a.m.U.S. TAG to ISO/TC 159Bonham D (Level Three)10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.Chapter Revitalization SubcommitteeCrockett D (Level Four)10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon<strong>Ergonomics</strong> in Design Editorial BoardTexas Ballroom D (Level Four)12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. (lunch)Student Chapter PresidentsMission B (Level Two)12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. (lunch)GEIA MeetingCrockett D (Level Four)3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.Journal of Cognitive Engineering <strong>and</strong> Decision MakingEditorial BoardLone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)3:30 to 4:30 p.m.Thursday, October 22ISO/TC 159/WG2Crockett D (Level Four)9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Education <strong>and</strong> Training CommitteePresidio B (Level Three)12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. (lunch)Technical Group <strong>Program</strong> ChairsPresidio B (Level Three)5:15 to 6:30 p.m.Friday, October 23Board of Certification in Professional <strong>Ergonomics</strong>Presidio A (Level Three)8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Technical <strong>Program</strong> CommitteePresidio B (Level Three)8:15 to 10:15 a.m. (breakfast)ISO/TC 159/WG2Crockett D (Level Four)9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.Saturday, October 24Board of Certification in Professional <strong>Ergonomics</strong>Presidio A (Level Three)8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.ISO/TC 159/WG2Crockett B (Level Four)9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.Technical Group Business MeetingsMonday, October 19Technical Group Newsletter EditorsMission B (Level Two)1:30 to 2:30 p.m.Council of Technical GroupsLone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)3:30 to 5:00 p.m.4 GENERAL INFORMATION


Tuesday, October 20Augmented CognitionLone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)5:00 to 7:00 p.m.Individual Differences in PerformanceCrockett D (Level Four)12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. (lunch)Product DesignBowie B (Level Two)5:00 to 7:00 p.m.System DevelopmentBowie C (Level Two)5:00 to 6:00 p.m.Test <strong>and</strong> EvaluationCrockett D (Level Four)7:30 to 8:30 a.m. (breakfast)Wednesday, October 21Aerospace SystemsRepublic B (Level Four)3:00 to 5:00 p.m.AgingBonham E (Level Three)12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. (lunch)Cognitive Engineering <strong>and</strong> Decision MakingLone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)4:30 to 6:00 p.m.CommunicationsSeguin (Level Four)3:30 to 4:30 p.m.Computer Systems (with Internet)Seguin (Level Four)5:30 to 6:30 p.m.EducationMission A (Level Two)7:00 to 8:30 a.m. (breakfast)Environmental Design (with Macroergonomics)Lone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)3:15 to 4:30 p.m.Forensics Professional (with Safety)Republic A (Level Four)3:30 to 4:30 p.m.Health CareTravis A/B (Level Three)3:15 to 4:30 p.m.<strong>Human</strong> Performance ModelingTravis A/B (Level Three)5:30 to 6:30 p.m.Industrial <strong>Ergonomics</strong>Travis C/D (Level Three)4:00 to 5:30 p.m.Internet (with Computer Systems)Seguin (Level Four)5:30 to 6:30 p.m.Macroergonomics (with Environmental Design)Lone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)3:15 to 4:30 p.m.Perception & PerformanceMission A (Level Two)12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. (lunch)Safety (with Forensics Professional)Republic A (Level Four)3:30 to 4:30 p.m.Surface TransportationRepublic A (Level Four)5:00 to 6:30 p.m.TrainingBowie B (Level Two)3:30 to 4:30 p.m.Virtual EnvironmentsBowie A (Level Two)3:30 to 4:30 p.m.Social EventsMonday, October 19First-Timers ReceptionTexas Ballroom D (Level Four)5:30 to 6:30 p.m.Gala Opening Reception (ticket required)Texas Ballroom D/E/F (Level Four)6:30 to 9:00 p.m.Tuesday, October 20Student ReceptionTexas Ballroom A (Level Four)5:00 to 6:00 p.m.Technical ToursBuses will begin loading from the Market Street entranceof the hotel 15 minutes prior to the departuretimes listed on the next page. Tickets for events notsold out may be purchased at the Registration Counter.Tickets must be presented when buses are loading.At press time, seven tours were scheduled to takeplace; however, please check the daily on-site newsletter<strong>and</strong> the poster boards in the registration area forupdates about canceled events.GeneralInformationGENERAL INFORMATION 5


MondayOct. 19Wednesday, October 21T1, USAF 711th <strong>Human</strong> Performance Wing7:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.T3, TransGuide Operations Center9:00 to 11:30 a.m.T4, Army Medical Department Center <strong>and</strong> School/Center for the Intrepid9:30 a.m. to 12:45 p.m.T5, Johnson Center for Surgical Innovation1:30 to 4:30 p.m.Thursday, October 22T6, San Antonio Shoes Shoemaking Factory8:45 to 10:45 a.m.T8, Army Medical Department Center <strong>and</strong> School/Center for the Intrepid9:30 a.m. to 12:45 p.m.T9, AT&T Labs/Whole Foods Flagship Location/H-E-B Retail Support Center8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.TECHNICAL PROGR<strong>AM</strong>Monday, October 198:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.WorkshopsNote: Workshops 1, 7, 8, <strong>and</strong> 11 were canceled priorto the meeting.Morning-Only Workshop8:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonWK2 – Cognitive Crash Dummies: Predictive<strong>Human</strong> Performance Modeling for InteractiveSystem DesignBonnie E. John, Carnegie Mellon U.Monday, October 19, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonRepublic B (Level Four)Afternoon-Only Workshops1:30 to 5:00 p.m.WK3 – Engineering Resilience to Create SafetyDavid D. Woods, Ohio State U.Monday, October 19, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 5:00 p.m.Republic B (Level Four)WK4 – Communications Analysis for AssessingCollaborationNancy J. Cooke, Arizona State U.; Jamie C.Gorman, Cognitive Engineering Research Inst.Monday, October 19, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 5:00 p.m.Bowie A (Level Two)Full-Day Workshops9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.WK5 – User Interface Design Prototyping UsingAdobe FlashSav Shrestha, Am<strong>and</strong>a Smith, Justin W. Owens,<strong>and</strong> Barbara S. Chaparro, Wichita State U.Monday, October 19, 20<strong>09</strong>, 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.Travis C/D (Level Three)WK6 – Case Studies in Cognitive SystemsEngineeringLaura Militello, U. of Dayton Research Inst.;Cynthia Oakes Dominguez <strong>and</strong> Corey Fallon,Klein Associates Division of Applied ResearchAssociates; Gavan Lintern, General Dynamics;Gary Klein, Klein Associates Division of AppliedResearch AssociatesMonday, October 19, 20<strong>09</strong>, 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.Bowie C (Level Two)Key to Abbreviations Used in This <strong>Program</strong>ASAACCECCSDEMEEDFPGSHCHPIDIEIMEPLPPPDPOSSSSSFSTSDTETVEWKAerospace SystemsAgingAugmented CognitionCognitive Engineering & Decision MakingCommunicationsComputer SystemsDemonstrationsEducationEnvironmental DesignForensics ProfessionalGeneral SessionsHealth Care<strong>Human</strong> Performance ModelingIndividual Differences in PerformanceIndustrial <strong>Ergonomics</strong>InternetMacroergonomicsPlenary SessionPerception & PerformanceProduct DesignPostersSafetySpecial SessionsStudent ForumSurface TransportationSystem DevelopmentTest & EvaluationTrainingVirtual EnvironmentsWorkshops6 OCTOBER 19 – MONDAY


WK9 – How To Be an Effective <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>/<strong>Ergonomics</strong> Expert WitnessMarc L. Resnick, Florida International U.; AndyLeCocq <strong>and</strong> David Thompson, Consultants; H.Harvey Cohen, Error Analysis, Inc.Monday, October 19, 20<strong>09</strong>, 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.Seguin B (Level Four)WK10 – <strong>Human</strong>-Centered Systems EngineeringGeorge M. Samaras, Samaras & Associates, Inc.Monday, October 19, 20<strong>09</strong>, 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.Republic A (Level Four)WK12 – An Approach to Rapid In-Depth TaskAnalysis TechniquesAvi Parush, Carleton U.Monday, October 19, 20<strong>09</strong>, 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.Travis A/B (Level Three)Monday, October 198:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.ForumsHCF – Health Care Forum: <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> <strong>and</strong><strong>Ergonomics</strong> Practical Applications to ImproveHospital Health Care Delivery SystemsModerator: Andrew S. Imada, A. S. Imada & AssociatesPanelists: Ben-Tzion Karsh, U. of Wisconsin – Madison;Margaret (Marnie) Myhre, Fairview Health Systems;Lynda Enos, Oregon Nurses Assn.Monday, October 19, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.Bonham E (Level Three)PDF – Teaching <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Ergonomics</strong>:A Professional Development ForumChair: Francis T. Durso, Georgia TechPanelists: Patricia R. DeLucia, Texas Tech U.;Elizabeth Blickensderfer, Embry-Riddle AeronauticalU.; Steven M. Casey, Ergonomic Systems Design, Inc.;John D. Lee, U. of Wisconsin – Madison; KathleenMosier, San Francisco State U.; Ronald G. Shapiro,Consultant; Thomas J. Smith, U. of Minnesota;Deborah A. Boehm-Davis, George Mason U.; GavrielSalvendy, Purdue U.; Arthur D. Fisk, Georgia Tech;Raja Parasuraman, George Mason U.; Joel Warm, AirForce Research Lab; & Russ Branaghan, ArizonaState U.Monday, October 19, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.Bowie B (Level Two)Monday, October 199:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.SF1 – STUDENT CAREER AND PROFESSIONALDEVELOPMENT DAYAlternative FormatMonday, October 19, 20<strong>09</strong>, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)Student ForumPart I: The Art of Getting Published9:00 to 10:15 a.m.Chair: S<strong>and</strong>ra K. Garrett, Clemson U./<strong>HFES</strong> StudentAffairs ChairParticipants: Nancy J. Cooke, Arizona State U.; Peter A.Hancock, U. of Central FloridaPart II: How to Find (<strong>and</strong> Secure) Funding10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonChair: S<strong>and</strong>ra K. Garrett, Clemson U./<strong>HFES</strong> StudentAffairs ChairParticipants: Ben-Tzion Karsh, U. of Wisconsin –Madison; others TBAGroup lunches organized on site.Part III: Multidisciplinary Teams: Speaking aCommon Language <strong>and</strong> Avoiding PitfallsCohosted by the <strong>HFES</strong> Old Dominion U. <strong>and</strong> U. ofIdaho Student Chapters1:30 to 4:00 p.m.Chair: T. Robert Turner, <strong>HFES</strong> Old Dominion U.Student Chapter President; Cochair: Rylan M. Clark,<strong>HFES</strong> U. of Idaho Student Chapter PresidentParticipants: Gerard Torenvliet, Esterline|CMCElectronics; Jason Telner, Honeywell Labs; GingerWatson, Old Dominion U.; Arnold Lund, Microsoft;Elizabeth Gibson, AT&T MobilityMonday, October 191:30 to 5:00 p.m.Technical Group Business MeetingsTechnical Group Newsletter EditorsMission B (Level Two)1:30 to 2:30 p.m.Council of Technical GroupsLone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)3:30 to 5:00 p.m.MondayOct. 19OCTOBER 19 – MONDAY 7


TuesdayOct. 20Monday, October 194:45 to 6:15 p.m.NEM – NATIONAL ERGONOMICS MONTHAlternative FormatMonday, October 19, 20<strong>09</strong>, 4:45 to 6:15 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)Chair: Raegan M. Hoeft, NEM Committee ChairSteven M. Casey, “The Good, the Bad, <strong>and</strong> theUgly” in the Promotion of <strong>Ergonomics</strong>...withSincere Apologies to Sergio Leone <strong>and</strong> ClintEastwoodInteractive GamesPresentation of winners of the NEM 20<strong>09</strong> Best ActionPlan ContestTuesday, October 207:30 to 8:30 a.m.Technical Group Business MeetingTest <strong>and</strong> EvaluationCrockett D (Level Four)7:30 to 8:30 a.m. (breakfast)Tuesday, October 208:00 to 10:15 a.m.PL – OPENING PLENARY SESSIONPlenaryTuesday, October 20Texas Ballroom A/B/C (Level Four)8:00 to 10:15 a.m.Chair: Cheryl A. Bolstad, <strong>HFES</strong> Technical <strong>Program</strong>Committee Chair1. Keynote Address: Border Security Mission –All Threats Environment, John C. Pfeifer, U.S.Border Patrol2. Presentation of <strong>HFES</strong> Fellows3. Presentation of <strong>HFES</strong> Awards4. Presidential Address: Assessing <strong>Human</strong><strong>Factors</strong>/<strong>Ergonomics</strong>: How Are We Doingas a Discipline? Paul A. Green, <strong>HFES</strong> PresidentTuesday, October 2010:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonTechnical SessionsAS1 – DISPLAYS AND HUMAN PERFORMANCEIN AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLectureTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonRepublic A (Level Four)Aerospace SystemsChair: Ernesto Bustamante, U. of Idaho; Cochair:Sehchang Hah, Federal Aviation Admin.1. Francis T. Durso <strong>and</strong> Jacob Fleming, GeorgiaTech; Brian Johnson, Texas Tech U.; JerryCrutchfield, Federal Aviation Admin., WhatInformation Is Needed in Today’s ControlTower: From Information Requests toDisplay Design2. Arathi Sethumadhavan, Texas Tech U., Effectsof Automation Types on Air Traffic ControllerSituation Awareness <strong>and</strong> Performance3. Esa M. Rantanen, Rochester Inst. of Technology,Measurement of Temporal Awareness in AirTraffic Control4. Hendrik Oberheid, Bernhard Weber, <strong>and</strong> MichaelRudolph, German Aerospace Center (DLR),Visual Controller Aids to Support LateMerging Operations for Fuel-Efficient <strong>and</strong>Noise-Reduced Approach Procedures5. Krista Oinonen <strong>and</strong> Lauri Oksama, U. of Turku;Esa M. Rantanen, Rochester Inst. of Technology;Jukka Hyönä, U. of Turku, Do Velocity VectorsSupport Multiple Object Tracking?CE1 – HUMAN-ROBOT INTERACTION: ISSUESIN THE DESIGN OF INTERFACES FOR WORKIN DISTANT ENVIRONMENTSInvited SymposiumTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonLone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Douglas J. Gillan, North Carolina State U.;Cochair: Marc Gacy, Alion Science & TechnologyMA&D Operation1. Douglas J. Gillan, North Carolina State U.,<strong>Human</strong>-Robot Interaction: Issues in theDesign of Interfaces for Work in DistantEnvironments2. Roger A. Chadwick <strong>and</strong> Joseph C. Vargas, NewMexico State U., Map <strong>and</strong> Ground ViewIntegration in UGV Systems: A StructuredObservational Analysis8 OCTOBER 20 – TUESDAY


3. Jennifer M. Riley, Laura D. Strater, Fleet Davis,Sean Strater, <strong>and</strong> Laurie Faulkner, SA Technologies,Inc., Situation Awareness <strong>and</strong> TeamCommunication in Robot Control4. Patricia L. McDermott <strong>and</strong> Alia Fisher, AlionScience & Technology MA&D Operations,The Trade-Off of Frame Rate <strong>and</strong> Resolutionin a Route-Clearing Task: Implications for<strong>Human</strong>-Robot Interaction5. Shaun Hutchins, Alion Science & TechnologyMA&D Operations; Keryl Ann Cosenzo, U.S.Army Research Lab; Patricia L. McDermott,Alion Science & Technology MA&D Operations;Theo-Dric Feng <strong>and</strong> Michael Barnes, U.S. ArmyResearch Lab; Marc Gacy, Alion Science & TechnologyMA&D Operations, An Investigation ofthe Tactile Communications Channel forRobotic ControlFP1 – HF/E PRACTICE FROM THE PERSPEC-TIVE OF FORENSIC CONSULTING FIRMSDiscussion PanelTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonBowie A (Level Two)Forensics ProfessionalChair: Tonya L. Smith-Jackson, Virginia TechPanelists: H. Harvey Cohen, Error Analysis, Inc.;William Vigilante, Robson Forensic, Inc.; TimothyRhoades, Applied Safety <strong>and</strong> <strong>Ergonomics</strong>, Inc.;Steven Arndt, Exponent Failure Analysis Assoc., Inc.GS1 – PRESIDENT’S FORUM:THE HF/E SHOWSTARRING JEFF KELLEYAlternative FormatTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonLone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)General SessionsJohn F. (“Jeff”) Kelley, IBM Corp. & <strong>HFES</strong> PastPresidentHC1 – HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLO-GIES AND HUMAN FACTORSLectureTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonTravis A/B (Level Three)Health CareChair: Emily Patterson, Ohio State U.1. Alissa L. Russ <strong>and</strong> Jason J. Saleem, RoudebushVA Medical Center; Connie F. Justice, Indiana U.;Heather Hagg, Roudebush VA Medical Center;Peter A. Woodbridge, VA Nebraska Western IowaHealth Care System; Bradley N. Doebbeling,Roudebush VA Medical Center, Health CareWorkers’ Perceptions of Information in theElectronic Health Record2. Geva Vashitz, Ben Gurion U. of the Negev; HarelGilutz, Soroka U. Medical Center; Joachim Meyer,Ben Gurion U. of the Negev, Physicians’ BypassEnrollment Suggestions Into a Clinical RemindersIntervention3. Julia DeBlasio <strong>and</strong> Bruce N. Walker, GeorgiaTech, Documentation in a Medical Setting:Effects of Technology on Perceived Qualityof Care4. Timothy R. McEwen, Wright State U.; NancyElder, U. of Cincinnati; John M. Flach, WrightState U., Lessons for Electronic MedicalRecords From Family Medical Practices5. Alissa L. Russ, Jason J. Saleem, M. Sue McManus,Alan J. Zillich, <strong>and</strong> Bradley N. Doebbeling,Roudebush VA Medical Center, ComputerizedMedication Alerts <strong>and</strong> Prescriber MentalModels: Observing Routine Patient CareIE1 – TRUNK AND LOW BACKLectureTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonSeguin (Level Four)Industrial <strong>Ergonomics</strong>Chair: Carol Stuart-Buttle, Consultant; Cochair: DavidCochran, U. of Nebraska1. Susan E. Kotowski, Kermit G. Davis, <strong>and</strong> LisaLemen, U. of Cincinnati, An Objective Measureof the Subjective Pain Response ResultingFrom Lumbar Muscle Fatigue Due to Lifting2. Sue A. Ferguson, William S. Marras, W. GaryAllread, Gregory G. Knapik, Kimberly A. V<strong>and</strong>len,Riley E. Splittstoesser, <strong>and</strong> Gang Yang, OhioState U., Musculoskeletal Disorder RiskAssociated With Auto Rotation Angle Duringan Assembly Task3. William S. Marras, Steven A. Lavender, Sue A.Ferguson, Riley E. Splittstoesser, <strong>and</strong> Gang Yang,Ohio State U., Dynamic Load Moment Exposure<strong>and</strong> Spine Function Impairment4. Steven A. Lavender <strong>and</strong> Monica Johnson, OhioState U., Is There a Lateral Transfer DistanceThat Minimizes the Twisting <strong>and</strong> LateralBending Motions of the Spine During BoxTransfers?5. Steven A. Lavender, William S. Marras, Sue A.Ferguson, Riley E. Splittstoesser, Gang Yang, <strong>and</strong>Pete Schabo, Ohio State U., Identifying SafeLoad Moment Exposures for the BackTuesdayOct. 20OCTOBER 20 – TUESDAY 9


TuesdayOct. 20PD1 – SPEAKER LECTURE – SPARKINGINNOVATION: HOW USER-CENTEREDPROFESSIONALS CAN GET A SEAT ATTHE BUSINESS STRATEGY TABLEInvited AddressTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonBowie B (Level Two)Product DesignChair: Stanley H. Caplan, Usability Associates;Cochair: Patrick E. Patterson, Texas Tech U.Nelson Soken, Medtronic, Inc., Sparking Innovation:How User-Centered Professionals Can Geta Seat at the Business Strategy TablePP1 – VIGILANCE PERFORMANCELectureTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonRepublic B (Level Four)Perception & PerformanceChair: Barry Goettl, U.S. Air Force Research Lab;Cochair: Curtis Craig, Texas Tech U.1. Brian Taylor, Nicole Arbuckle, <strong>and</strong> David Kancler,U. of Dayton Research Inst.; Paul Havig, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base; Scott Galster, Aptima,Inc., Maintaining Vigilance With Auditory<strong>and</strong> Visual Cues in Comm<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> ControlEnvironments2. William S. Helton, Rosalie P. Kern, <strong>and</strong> Donieka R.Walker, Michigan Technological U., Speed-Accuracy Trade-Offs <strong>and</strong> the Role of EmotionalStimuli on the Sustained Attention toResponse Task (SART)3. Victor S. Finomore, U.S. Air Force Research Lab;Tyler H. Shaw, George Mason U.; Joel S. Warm,U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Gerald Matthews,U. of Cincinnati; Dave Weldon, JXT Application,Inc.; David B. Boles, U. of Alabama, On theWorkload of Vigilance: Comparison of theNASA-TLX <strong>and</strong> the MRQ4. Tyler H. Shaw, Raja Parasuraman, <strong>and</strong> SiddharthaSikdar, George Mason U.; Joel S. Warm, U.S. AirForce Research Lab, Knowledge of Results <strong>and</strong>Signal Salience Modify Vigilance Performance<strong>and</strong> Cerebral Hemovelocity5. Joel S. Warm <strong>and</strong> Victor S. Finomore, U.S. AirForce Research Lab; Tyler H. Shaw, GeorgeMason U.; Matthew E. Funke, Michelle J.Hausen, Gerald Matthews, <strong>and</strong> Purcell Taylor, U.of Cincinnati; Michael A. Vidulich <strong>and</strong> Daniel W.Repperger, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; James L.Szalma <strong>and</strong> Peter A. Hancock, U. of CentralFlorida, Effects of Training with Knowledgeof Results on Diagnosticity in Vigilance PerformanceSD1 – HUMAN FACTORS IMPACTING DESIGNLectureTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonTravis C/D (Level Three)System DevelopmentChair: James A. Pharmer, U.S. Naval Air WarfareCenter Training Systems Division; Cochair: DebraClark, U.S. Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren1. Hope E. J. Nesteruk, U.S. Army Research Lab,Assessing the <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> of a <strong>Human</strong>Engineering St<strong>and</strong>ard2. G. Fletcher <strong>and</strong> E. Forrest, Systems Engineering& Assessment Ltd., Incorporating Social <strong>and</strong>Organizational <strong>Factors</strong> Into Defense <strong>Human</strong><strong>Factors</strong> Integration3. Carroll Thronesbery, S&K Aerospace; DebraSchreckenghost, TRACLabs, Inc.; Arthur Molin,S&K Aerospace, Concept of Operations StoryboardTool4. Les Ainsworth, Synergy Consultants, A TaskAnalysis of the Task Analysis ProcessT1 – COGNITIVE FACTORS IN TRAININGLectureTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonRepublic C (Level Four)TrainingChair: Ericka Rovira, U.S. Military Academy; Cochair:Jeff Beaubien, Aptima, Inc.1. Michael B. Dillard <strong>and</strong> David B. Boles, U. ofAlabama, Interference Between VisuospatialDual Tasks <strong>and</strong> the Effects of Training2. Chad C. Tossell, Rice U.; Brent A. Smith, U.S.Air Force Academy; Roger W. Schvaneveldt,Arizona State U., Polytechnic, The Influence ofRating Method on Knowledge Structures3. Jessica M. Ray, Consortium Research Fellows<strong>Program</strong>; John S. Barnett, U.S. Army ResearchInst. for the Behavioral & Social Sciences, AnEvolution of Tutoring <strong>and</strong> Training From<strong>Human</strong>s to Intelligent Systems: <strong>Human</strong><strong>Factors</strong> Considerations4. Davin Pavlas, C. Shawn Burke, Stephen M. Fiore,<strong>and</strong> Eduardo Salas, U. of Central Florida; R<strong>and</strong>yJensen <strong>and</strong> Dan Fu, Stottler Henke Associates,Inc., Enhancing Unmanned Aerial SystemTraining: A Taxonomy of Knowledge, Skills,Attitudes, <strong>and</strong> Methods5. David Schuster, Michelle Harper-Sciarini, MichaelCurtis, Florian Jentsch, <strong>and</strong> Ron Swanson, U. ofCentral Florida, The Relationship BetweenConceptual Underst<strong>and</strong>ing <strong>and</strong> Performance10 OCTOBER 20 – TUESDAY


Tuesday, October 2012:00 noon to 1:30 p.m.Technical Group Business MeetingIndividual DifferencesPresidio A (Level Three)12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m.Tuesday, October 201:30 to 3:00 p.m.CE2 – COMPARING, MERGING,AND ADAPTINGMETHODS OF COGNITIVE TASK ANALYSISDiscussion PanelTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Robert R. Hoffman, Inst. for <strong>Human</strong> &Machine Cognition; Cochair: Ann M. Bisantz, U. atBuffalo, SUNYPanelists: Birsen Donmez, Massachusetts Inst. of Technology;Julie A. Adams, V<strong>and</strong>erbilt U.; David B. Kaber,North Carolina State U.; Ann M. Bisantz, U. at Buffalo,SUNY; Emilie Roth, Roth Cognitive EngineeringCS1 – COLLABORATION, TRUST, ANDSECURITYLectureTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Seguin (Level Four)Computer Systems; cosponsored by InternetChair: Lorraine Normore, U. of Tennessee, Knoxville;Cochair: Douglas Fox, Wichita State U.1. Eric Bier, Dorrit Billman, Kyle Dent, <strong>and</strong> StuartK. Card, Palo Alto Research Corp., CollaborativeSensemaking Tools for Task Forces2. Marc L. Resnick, Florida International U.,Overcoming Bias in the Deliberations ofDistributed Teams3. William Albert, William Gribbons, <strong>and</strong> JindrichAlmadas, Bentley U., Preconscious Assessmentof Trust: A Case Study of Financial<strong>and</strong> Health Care Web Sites4. Deborah L. Nelson <strong>and</strong> Kim-Phuong L. Vu,California State U., Long Beach, Use of Image-Based Mnemonic Techniques to Enhance theMemorability of User-Generated Passwords5. Peter Hoonakker, U. of Wisconsin – Madison; NisBornoe, IT U. of Copenhagen; Pascale Carayon,U. of Wisconsin – Madison, Password AuthenticationFrom a <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> Perspective:Results of a Survey Among End-UsersDEM1 – DEMONSTRATIONS 1DemonstrationsTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Republic A/B (Level Four)Special SessionsChair: Ronald Laurids Boring, S<strong>and</strong>ia National Labs;Cochair: Johanna Oxstr<strong>and</strong>, Vattenfall Ringhals ABNote: Short demonstrations will be repeated throughoutthe 90-minute session. Attendees are encouragedto go from room to room to view demos.1. Shane D. Pinder <strong>and</strong> T. Claire Davies, Auckl<strong>and</strong>U. of Technology, Bimodal Aircraft CockpitUser Interface of the TABI/A (Republic B)2. Tiffany S. Jastrzembski <strong>and</strong> Kevin A. Gluck, U.S.Air Force Research Lab; Stuart Rodgers, AGSTechNet, The Predictive PerformanceOptimizer: An Adaptive Analysis CognitiveTool for Performance Prediction (Republic A)GS2 – THE FUTURE OF HUMAN FACTORS/ERGONOMICS RESEARCH:ADAPT OR DIEDiscussion PanelCommittee on <strong>Human</strong>-Systems IntegrationTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)General SessionsChair: William S. Marras, Ohio State U.Panelists: Nancy J. Cooke, Arizona State U.; Joel S.Warm, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; WaldemarKarwowski, U. of Central Florida; Thomas B. Sheridan,Massachusetts Inst. of Technology; Matthew Rizzo,U. of Iowa; John D. Lee, U. of Wisconsin – Madison;Bradford W. Hesse, National Cancer Inst.HP1 – 100 YEARS OF QUEUING THEORY:IMPLICATIONS FOR HF ENGINEERINGDiscussion PanelTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Travis A/B (Level Three)<strong>Human</strong> Performance ModelingChair: Yili Liu, U. of MichiganPanelists: Richard W. Pew, BBN Technologies;Wayne D. Gray, Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst.; John D.Lee, U. of Wisconson – Madison; R. Darin Ellis,Wayne State U.; Changxu Wu, U. at Buffalo, SUNYTuesdayOct. 20OCTOBER 20 – TUESDAY 11


TuesdayOct. 20ME1 – CRITICAL CARE TECHNOLOGY: CAN’TLIVE WITH IT, CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT ITDiscussion PanelTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Travis C/D (Level Three)Macroergonomics; cosponsored by Health CareChair: Carla J. Alvarado, U. of Wisconsin – Madison;Cochair: Nancy L. J. Larson, 3M Corp.Panelists: Pascale Carayon, U. of Wisconsin – Madison;Rolin (Terry) J. Fairbanks, U. of Rochester; Shawna J.Perry, VCU Health Systems; Dean F. Sittig, U. ofTexas – Memorial Hermann Center for HealthcareQuality <strong>and</strong> Safety; Ben-Tzion Karsh, U. of Wisconsin –MadisonPOS1 – POSTERS 1Poster SessionTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom Corridor (Level Two)Chair: Jessica M. Ray, U. of Central Florida; Cochair:Robin A. N. Littlejohn, Mississippi State U.Poster sessions are 90 minutes only; presenters arerequired to be present throughout the session.Health Care1. Ila J. Elson, Abbott Labs, <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>Research Plan for Designing AutomatedTesting Equipment for Blood CollectionCenters2. Justin R. Estepp, James C. Christensen, <strong>and</strong>Jason W. Monnin, U.S. Air Force Research Lab;Iris M. Davis, Ball Aerospace & TechnologiesCorp.; Glenn F. Wilson, Physiometrix, Inc.,Validation of a Dry Electrode System for EEG3. Anthony Vacher, Biomedical Military ResearchInst.; Guillaume de Saint Maurice, EmmanuelleStainmesse, <strong>and</strong> Nassera Amamou, MilitaryTeaching Hospital Percy; Marie-Pierre Fornette,Biomedical Military Research Inst.; ReneAmalberti, French National Authority for Health;Yves Auroy, Military Teaching Hospital Percy,Study of Rule-Related Behavioral Migrationsin an Anesthesiology Department4. Cindy H. Lio, C. Melody Carswell, <strong>and</strong> Q. Han,U. of Kentucky; Adrian Park, U. of Maryl<strong>and</strong>;Stephen Strup, W. B. Seales, <strong>and</strong> Duncan Clarke, U.of Kentucky; G. Lee, U. of Maryl<strong>and</strong>; J. Hoskins,U. of Kentucky, Using Formal Qualitative Methodsto Guide Early Development of an AugmentedReality Display System for Surgery5. Martina I. Klein, Texas Tech U.; Cindy Hui-Lio,Russel C. Grant, C. Melody Carswell, <strong>and</strong> StephenStrup, U. of Kentucky, A Mental WorkloadStudy on the 2-D <strong>and</strong> 3-D Viewing Conditionsof the da Vinci Surgical RobotTraining6. Russell C. Grant, C. Melody Carswell, CindyHui-Lio, W. B. Seales, <strong>and</strong> Duncan Clarke, U.of Kentucky, Verbal Time Production as aSecondary Task: Which Metrics <strong>and</strong> TargetInterval Are Most Sensitive to Workload forFine Motor Laparoscopic Training Tasks?7. Vanessa Johnson, Auburn U. Consortium ResearchFellows <strong>Program</strong>; Robert J. Pleban <strong>and</strong> Jennifer S.Tucker, U.S. Army Research Inst. for the Behavioral& Social Sciences, Investigating the Effectsof Desktop Computer Simulation Trainingon Situation Awareness (SA) <strong>and</strong> AdaptiveDecision-Making Skills8. Brittany Sellers, Stephen M. Fiore, Javier Rivera,<strong>and</strong> Florian Jentsch, U. of Central Florida,Research Issues for Collaborative VersusIndividual Training in the X-Ray SecurityScreening Task9. Alex<strong>and</strong>er D. Walker, Thomas L. Carpenter,Jason D. Moss, Fred S. Switzer, Adam W. Hoover,<strong>and</strong> Eric R. Muth, Clemson U., The Evaluationof Virtual Environment Training for a BuildingClearing Task10. Heather C. Lum, Valerie K. Sims, MosheFeldman, Kimberly A. Smith-Jentsch, <strong>and</strong>Nicholas C. Lagattuta, U. of Central Florida,Emotion Regulation Training <strong>and</strong> SceneUnderst<strong>and</strong>ing Are Related to Eye MovementsDuring a Computer-Based InteractiveSimulationModeling <strong>and</strong> Simulation11. Julia A. Kalish, Purdue U., Simulation ofPregnant Workers Performing a St<strong>and</strong>ingAssembly Task12. Daniel Lafond, Defence Research & DevelopmentCanada; Julie Champagne, GuillaumeHervet, Jean-François Gagnon, <strong>and</strong> SébastienTremblay, Université Laval; Robert Rousseau,Neosapiens, Inc., Decision Analysis UsingPolicy-Capturing <strong>and</strong> Process-Tracing Techniquesin a Simulated Naval Air Defense Task13. Daewoo Park, Thomas J. Armstrong, Charles B.Woolley, <strong>and</strong> Christopher J. Best, U. of Michigan,Skin <strong>and</strong> Bone Surfaces for a Three-Dimensional Kinematic H<strong>and</strong> ModelAging14. Anne Collins McLaughlin, Laura M. Fletcher,<strong>and</strong> John F. Sprufera, North Carolina State U.,The Aging Farmer: <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>Research Needs in Agricultural Work15. Arunkumar Pennathur, Luis Rene Contreras,Odi Ikpe, <strong>and</strong> Julia Bader, U. of Texas at El Paso,Functional Anthropometry <strong>and</strong> Ranges ofMotion of Older Mexican-American Adults12 OCTOBER 20 – TUESDAY


University Lab PostersClemson U.<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> in Complex EnvironmentsResearch LabGeorgia TechProblem Solving <strong>and</strong> Educational Technology Lab<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> <strong>and</strong> Aging LabIowa State U.Physical <strong>Ergonomics</strong> <strong>and</strong> Injury Prevention Lab<strong>and</strong> Cognitive <strong>Ergonomics</strong> <strong>and</strong> Augmented<strong>Human</strong> Performance LabOhio State U.Institute for <strong>Ergonomics</strong>Purdue U.<strong>Human</strong> Performance Lab<strong>Human</strong> Integrated Systems Engineering LabHealthcare <strong>and</strong> Interactive Visual Engineering LabTexas Tech U.Visual Performance <strong>and</strong> Health Care LabPerformance, Stress, <strong>and</strong> Workload in HealthCare Lab <strong>and</strong> <strong>Human</strong>-Robot Interaction LabIndustrial Engineering <strong>Ergonomics</strong> LabU. of OklahomaCognitive Assessment <strong>and</strong> Systems EngineeringLab <strong>and</strong> Intelligent Transportation Systems LabVirginia TechAssessment <strong>and</strong> Cognitive <strong>Ergonomics</strong> Lab, Labfor User-Centric Innovations in Design, <strong>and</strong><strong>Human</strong>-Computer Interaction LabIndustrial <strong>Ergonomics</strong> <strong>and</strong> Biomechanics Lab,Locomotion Research Lab, <strong>and</strong> SafetyEngineering LabMacroergonomics <strong>and</strong> Group Decision SystemsLab, Auditory Systems Lab, <strong>and</strong> VehicleResearch <strong>and</strong> Simulation LabWichita State U.Software Usability Research LabDecision Making Research Lab, Perception <strong>and</strong>Attention Lab, <strong>and</strong> Visual Psychophysics LabNational Inst. of Aviation Research <strong>Human</strong><strong>Factors</strong> Lab, Perception <strong>and</strong> Cognition Lab,<strong>and</strong> Quantitative LabS1 – HUMAN FACTORS IN WEAPONS SAFETYDiscussion PanelTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Bowie A (Level Two)SafetyChair: Valerie J. Rice, <strong>AM</strong>EDD Center <strong>and</strong> SchoolPanelists: Richard J. Hornick, Hornick & Assoc.;Hal W. Hendrick, Hendrick & Assoc.; Raymond M.Bateman, U.S. Army Research Lab–HRED–<strong>AM</strong>EDDFE; Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central FloridaST1 – DISTRACTION AND WORKLOADLectureTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Bowie B (Level Two)Surface TransportationChair: Michael E. Rakauskas, U. of Minnesota;Cochair: James Jenness, Westat1. Frank A. Drews <strong>and</strong> David L. Strayer, U. of Utah,Text Messaging During Simulated Driving2. David Rodrick, Vaithianathan Jothi, <strong>and</strong> VivekBhise, U. of Michigan – Dearborn, Effects ofDriving <strong>and</strong> Secondary Tasks on Lane-Changing Performance3. Jason A. Telner, David L. Wiesenthal, <strong>and</strong> EllenBialystok, York U., Video Gamer Advantagesin a Cellular Telephone <strong>and</strong> Driving Task4. Joel M. Cooper, Nate Medeiros-Ward, JanelleSeegmiller, <strong>and</strong> David L. Strayer, U. of Utah,Shifting Eyes <strong>and</strong> Thinking Hard Keep Us inOur Lanes5. Bryan Reimer, Bruce Mehler, Vincent Lammers,Ying Wang, <strong>and</strong> Joseph F. Coughlin, MassachusettsInst. of Technology, A Comparison ofThree Manual Destination Entry Methodson Their Impact on Visual Attention <strong>and</strong>Driving Performance: An On-Road EvaluationTE1 – HOW WOULD YOU TEST THIS?WORKS-IN-PROGRESS FORUM FOR HUMANFACTORS/ERGONOMICS TEST ANDEVALUATION INITIATIVESAlternative FormatTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Bowie C (Level Two)Test & EvaluationChair: Rebecca A. Grier, U.S. Naval Sea SystemsComm<strong>and</strong>; Cochair: Karla Eve Allan, U.S. ArmyNatick Soldier Research, Development, &Engineering CenterPanelists: Emily M. Stelzer, Aptima, Inc.; Daniel W.Mauney, <strong>Human</strong>Centric; Gisela Susanne Bahr, FloridaInst. of TechnologyTuesdayOct. 20OCTOBER 20 – TUESDAY 13


TuesdayOct. 20Tuesday, October 203:30 to 5:00 p.m.AC1 – ADVANCED COGNITIVE STATE ESTI-MATION AND PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY FORAUGMENTED COGNITIONLectureTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)Augmented CognitionChair: Cali M. Fidopiastis, U. of Central Florida;Cochair: Denise M. Nicholson, U. of Central Florida1. Glenn F. Wilson, Physiometrix, Inc.; Justin R.Estepp, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Iris M.Davis, Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp.,A Comparison of Performance <strong>and</strong> PsychophysiologicalClassification of Complex TaskPerformance2. Lee W. Sciarini, Cali Fidopiastis, <strong>and</strong> DeniseNicholson, U. of Central Florida, Toward aModular Cognitive State Gauge: AssessingSpatial Ability Utilization With MultiplePhysiological Measures3. Joseph R. Keebler, Lee W. Sciarini, CaliFidopiastis, Florian Jentsch, <strong>and</strong> DeniseNicholson, U. of Central Florida, Use of FunctionalNear-Infared Imaging to InvestigateNeural Correlates of Expertise in MilitaryTarget Identification4. Mark St. John <strong>and</strong> Matthew R. Risser, PacificScience & Engineering Group, SustainingVigilance by Activating a Secondary TaskWhen Inattention Is Detected5. Grant S. Taylor <strong>and</strong> James L. Szalma, U. ofCentral Florida, The Effects of the Adaptability<strong>and</strong> Reliability of Automation on Performance,Stress, <strong>and</strong> WorkloadCE3 – SUPPORTING COMPLEX WORK: SYSTEMDESIGN AND EVALUATIONLectureTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Jennifer Riley, SA Technologies, Inc.; Cochair:Julie Adams, V<strong>and</strong>erbilt U.1. Maia B. Cook, Harvey S. Smallman, Frank C.Lacson, <strong>and</strong> Daniel I. Manes, Pacific Science &Engineering Group, Design <strong>and</strong> Validation ofa Synthetic Task Environment to Study DynamicUnmanned Aerial Vehicle Replanning2. Gloria L. Calhoun <strong>and</strong> Mark H. Draper, 711<strong>Human</strong> Performance Wing; Heath A. Ruff, BallAerospace & Technologies Corp., Effect ofLevel of Automation on Unmanned AerialVehicle Routing Task3. Ronald Scott, BBN Technologies; Emilie Roth,Roth Cognitive Engineering; Robert Truxler,BBN Technologies; Jeffrey Wampler, U.S. AirForce Research Lab, Techniques for EffectiveCollaborative Automation for Air MissionReplanning4. Priyadarshini R. Pennathur <strong>and</strong> Dapeng Cao, U.at Buffalo, SUNY; Zheng Sui, Terra Technology;Ann M. Bisantz <strong>and</strong> Li Lin, U. at Buffalo, SUNY;Rolin (Terry) J. Fairbanks, U. of Rochester;Theresa K. Guarrera, U. at Buffalo, SUNY;Jennifer L. Brown, St. Joseph Hospital; Shawna J.Perry, VCU Health Systems; Robert L. Wears, U.of Florida – Jacksonville, Evaluating EmergencyDepartment Information TechnologyUsing a Simulation-Based Approach5. Heather F. Neyedli, U. of Toronto; Justin G.Holl<strong>and</strong>s, Defence Research & DevelopmentCanada; Greg A. Jamieson, U. of Toronto, <strong>Human</strong>Reliance on an Automated Combat ID System:Effects of Display FormatFP2 – ISSUES IN FORENSICS RESEARCH ANDPRACTICELectureTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Bowie A (Level Two)Forensics ProfessionalChair: Tonya L. Smith-Jackson, Virginia Tech1. Kenneth Nemire, HFE Consulting, AvoidingMisrepresentation in Forensic <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>2. Daniel A. Johnson, Daniel A. Johnson, Inc.,Forensic <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> Results inIncreased Pedestrian Safety3. Marc L. Resnick, Florida International U., WhenPerformance Management Fails: ForensicCase Studies From the Front Lines4. Carol Pollack-Nelson, Independent Safety Consulting;Shelley Waters Deppa, Safety BehaviorAnalysis, Inc., The Role <strong>and</strong> Limitations ofVoluntary St<strong>and</strong>ards in Consumer ProductSafety5. David Curry, ITC Expert Services; Anne Mathias<strong>and</strong> Valerian Skawinski, Packer Engineering, SlipSliding Away – Slip Resistance of AthleticSocks on Indoor Flooring14 OCTOBER 20 – TUESDAY


HC2 – MEDICAL INFORMATICS:WHAT CON-TRIBUTIONS CAN HUMAN FACTORS MAKE?Discussion PanelTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Travis A/B (Level Three)Health CareChair: Michael W. Smith, Ohio State U.Panelists: Alissa L. Russ, Roudebush VA MedicalCenter; Robert L. Wears, U. of Florida; EmilyPatterson, Ohio State U.; Anne Miller, V<strong>and</strong>erbilt U.;Laura Militello, U. of Dayton Research Inst.; ShiloAnders, V<strong>and</strong>erbilt U.; Ben-Tzion Karsh, U. ofWisconsin – MadisonIE2 – BIOMECHANICAL ANALYSIS TOPICSLectureTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Seguin (Level Four)Industrial <strong>Ergonomics</strong>Chair: Angela DiDomenico, Liberty Mutual ResearchInst. for Safety; Cochair: Naira Campbell-Kyureghyan,U. of Louisville1. Cheng-Jhe Lin, Siying Li, <strong>and</strong> Gwanseob Shin,U. at Buffalo, SUNY, Effects of Low BackFlexibility on Muscle Activities DuringWeight Holding2. Kermit G. Davis, Susan E. Kotowski, BalajiSharma, Donald Herrmann, <strong>and</strong> Anita P. Krishnan,U. of Cincinnati Medical Center, Combating theEffects of Sedentary Work: Postural VariabilityReduces Musculoskeletal Discomfort3. Christopher R. Reid, Pamela McCauley Bush,<strong>and</strong> Waldemar Karwowski, U. of Central Florida;Dianne L. McMullin, <strong>Ergonomics</strong> Applications,The Need for a Lower Extremity RiskAssessment Model4. Hongbo Zhang, Virginia Tech, The Identificationof Ankle <strong>and</strong> Hip Coordination Following theAnkle <strong>and</strong> Trunk Localized Muscle Fatigue5. Jian Liu, U. of Houston; Thurmon E. Lockhart,Virginia Tech, Trunk Angular KinematicsDuring Slip-Induced Falls <strong>and</strong> Activities ofDaily Living – Toward Developing a FallDetectorME2 – ADVANCING SAFETY IN CONSTRUC-TION:AN ORGANIZATIONAL, SYSTEMIC,ANDCULTURAL APPROACHDiscussion PanelTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Travis C/D (Level Three)MacroergonomicsChair: Maria J. Brunette, U. of Massachusetts, LowellPanelists: Carlos Evia, Virginia Tech; Peter Hoonakker,U. of Wisconsin – Madison; Brian M Kleiner, ElizabethHaro, <strong>and</strong> Tonya L. Smith-Jackson, Virginia TechPD2 – EIGHTH ANNUAL USER-CENTEREDPRODUCT DESIGN AWARD SESSIONAlternative FormatTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Bowie B (Level Two)Product DesignChair: Stan Caplan, Usability Associates; Cochair:Steven Belz, AT&T Bell LabsWinner to be announced, followed by a presentationabout the winning design.SF2 – TOWARD A STABLE CAREER IN ANUNSTABLE JOB MARKETDiscussion PanelTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Republic B (Level Four)Student ForumChair: Ronald G. Shapiro, ConsultantPanelists: Anthony D. Andre, Interface AnalysisAssociates; Robert M. Schumacher, User Centric, Inc.;David T. Windell, IBM Systems & Technology Group;Courtney I. Schur, California State U., NorthridgeT2 – ADOPTING THE TRAINING CYCLE FORTRUST TRAINING IN SWIFTLY STARTINGACTION TE<strong>AM</strong>SInvited SymposiumTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Republic C (Level Four)TrainingChair: Stephen M. Fiore, U. of Central Florida; Cochair:Elizabeth H. Lazarra, U. of Central Florida1. Jessica L. Wildman, Marissa L. Shuffler,Stephen M. Fiore, Elizabeth H. Lazzara,Michael A. Rosen, Luiz F. Xavier, Samuel R.Wooten II, <strong>and</strong> Eduardo Salas, U. of CentralFlorida, Adopting the Training Cycle for TrustTraining in Swift-Starting Action TeamsTuesdayOct. 20OCTOBER 20 – TUESDAY 15


TuesdayOct. 202. Nate Self, Praevius Group, Trust on the Battlefield3. Elizabeth H. Lazzara, Stephen M. Fiore, Jessica L.Wildman, Marissa L. Shuffler, <strong>and</strong> Eduardo Salas,U. of Central Florida, Managing Trust in SwiftlyStarting Action Teams4. Gregory A. Ruark, U.S. Army Research Inst. forthe Behavioral & Social Sciences; Kara L. Orvis,Zachary Horn, <strong>and</strong> Krista L. Langkamer, Aptima,Inc., Trust as Defined by U.S. Army Soldiers5. Sena Garven, U.S. Army Research Inst., Trustingthe Trust Literature: What Applied <strong>and</strong> TheoreticalLiteratures Have in CommonVE1 – LEVERAGING VIRTUAL REALITY ANDCOMPUTER-BASED G<strong>AM</strong>ES FOR TRAININGInvited SymposiumTuesday, October 20, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Republic A (Level Four)Virtual EnvironmentsChair: Laura D. Strater, SA Technologies, Inc.1. Laura D. Strater, SA Technologies, Inc.; DonaldLampton, U.S. Army Research Inst.; James P.Bliss <strong>and</strong> Karin Orvis, Old Dominion U.; JasonKring, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; StephanieLackey <strong>and</strong> Denise Nicholson, U. of CentralFlorida; William J. Becker, U.S. Naval PostgraduateSchool; Jennifer M. Riley, S<strong>and</strong>ro Scielzo,Fleet Davis, <strong>and</strong> John Hyatt, SA Technologies,Inc., Leveraging Virtual Reality <strong>and</strong> Computer-Based Games for Training2. Stephanie Lackey <strong>and</strong> Denise Nicholson, U. ofCentral Florida; William J. Becker, U.S. NavalPostgraduate School, What Can VR Do for U?Virtual Reality for Training Uninhabited AircraftSystems3. Donald Lampton, U.S. Army Research Inst.;James P. Bliss <strong>and</strong> Karin Orvis, Old Dominion U.;Jason Kring, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.;Glenn A. Martin, U. of Central Florida, A DistributedGame-Based Simulation TrainingResearch Testbed4. Jennifer M. Riley, S<strong>and</strong>ro Scielzo, John Hyatt,Fleet Davis, <strong>and</strong> Daniel Colombo, SA Technologies,Inc., Situation Awareness <strong>and</strong> PerformanceFeedback Toward Enhancing LearningWith Game Trainers: An Approach <strong>and</strong> LessonsLearned5. Davin Pavlas, Wendy Bedwell, Samuel R. WootenII, Kyle Heyne, <strong>and</strong> Eduardo Salas, U. of CentralFlorida, Investigating the Attributes in SeriousGames That Contribute to LearningTuesday, October 205:00 to 7:00 p.m.Technical Group Business MeetingsSystem DevelopmentBowie C (Level Two)5:00 to 6:00 p.m.Augmented CognitionLone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)5:00 to 7:00 p.m.Product DesignBowie B (Level Two)5:00 to 7:00 p.m.Wednesday, October 217:00 to 8:30 a.m.Technical Group Business MeetingEducationMission A (Level Two)7:00 to 8:30 a.m. (breakfast)Wednesday, October 218:30 to 10:00 a.m.Technical SessionsA1 – THE ROLE OF HUMAN FACTORS INOLDER WORKER RETENTION:WHAT DO WEKNOW AND WHAT WILL WE NEED TO KNOW?Discussion PanelWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Bowie B (Level Two)AgingChair: Anne Collins McLaughlin, North Carolina StateU.; Cochair: R<strong>and</strong>a L. Shehab, Oklahoma State U.Panelists: Carrie Bruce, Georgia Tech; Sheree Gibson,<strong>Ergonomics</strong> Applications; Jon Sanford, Georgia Tech;Diana Schwerha, Ohio U.; Diane Spokus, PennsylvaniaState U.; Harry S. Whiting, Ohio State U.16 OCTOBER 20 – TUESDAY


AS2 – FLIGHT DISPLAY DESIGN AND PILOTPERFORMANCELectureWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Republic B (Level Four)Aerospace SystemsChair: Daniel Eksuzian, ARINC EngineeringServices, LLC; Cochair: Gloria Calhoun, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base1. Amy L. Alex<strong>and</strong>er <strong>and</strong> Emily M. Stelzer, Aptima,Inc.; Sang-Hwan Kim, U. of Michigan – Dearborn;David B. Kaber, North Carolina State U.;Lawrence J. Prinzel, NASA Langley ResearchCenter, Data <strong>and</strong> Knowledge as Predictors ofPerceptions of Display Clutter, SubjectiveWorkload, <strong>and</strong> Pilot Performance2. Dennis B. Beringer, Civil Aerospace MedicalInst.; Terri Luke, Allison Quate, <strong>and</strong> ElizabethWalters, U. of Oklahoma, Helicopter Pilot Useof a See-Through, Head-Mounted DisplayWith Pathway Guidance for Visually GuidedFlight: Observations of Navigation Behavior<strong>and</strong> Obstacle Avoidance3. Nathan K. Bulkley, Brian P. Dyre, Roger Lew, <strong>and</strong>Kristin Caufield, U. of Idaho, A PeripherallyLocated Virtual Instrument L<strong>and</strong>ing DisplayAffords More Precise Control of ApproachPath During Simulated L<strong>and</strong>ings Than TraditionalInstrument L<strong>and</strong>ing Displays4. Sang-Hwan Kim, U. of Michigan – Dearborn;David B. Kaber, North Carolina State U.,Assessing the Effects of Conformal TerrainFeatures in Advanced Head-Up Displays onPilot PerformanceCE4 – HUMAN-COMPUTER ETIQUETTE:RECENT WORK FROM THE ETIQUETTEPERSPECTIVEDiscussion PanelWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Lone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Christopher Miller, Smart Information FlowTechnologies; Cochair: Caroline Hayes, U. of MinnesotaPanelists: Helen Altman Klein, Wright State U.; DavidKaber, North Carolina State U.; James P. Bliss, OldDominion U.; Kip Smith, Linköping U.; Peggy Wu,Smart Information Flow TechnologiesCE5 – RASMUSSEN’S S-R-K 30 YEARS LATER:IS HUMAN FACTORS BEST IN 3’S?Discussion PanelWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Lone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: David D. Woods, Ohio State U.; Cochair:Penelope M. S<strong>and</strong>erson, U. of Queensl<strong>and</strong>Panelists: John M. Flach, Wright State U.; ChristopherNemeth, ARA Klein Associates; Kathleen Mosier, SanFrancisco State U.; Shawn A. Weil, Aptima, Inc.GS3 – GENERAL SESSIONS POTPOURRI ILectureWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Travis C/D (Level Three)General SessionsChair: Cleotilde Gonzalez, Carnegie Melon U.;Cochair: Gretchen Anderson, Boeing1. William S. Helton, U. of Canterbury, Canines asPerceptual Workers2. Jon Holbrook, San Jose State U.Foundation/NASA Ames Research Center; KeyDismukes, NASA Ames Research Center,Prospective Memory in Everyday Tasks3. Cheng-Jhe Lin <strong>and</strong> Changxu Wu, U. at Buffalo,SUNY, Detecting Typing Errors in a NumericalTyping Task With Linear DiscriminantAnalysis of Single Trial EEG4. Hohyun Lee, Lesley Strawderman, <strong>and</strong> John M.Usher, Mississippi State U., Analyzing PedestrianTraffic Behavior Using Video Footage,Zone of Comfort, <strong>and</strong> Situation Awareness5. Samuel J. Brougher <strong>and</strong> Esa M. Rantanen,Rochester Inst. of Technology, Creativity <strong>and</strong>Design: Creativity’s New Definition <strong>and</strong> ItsRelationship to DesignHC3 – HUMAN FACTORS IN SURGERY – ILectureWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Travis A/B (Level Three)Health CareChair: Anne Miller, V<strong>and</strong>erbilt U.1. S. Henrickson Parker, U. of Aberdeen; A. Laviana,Georgetown U.; T. M. Sundt, Mayo Clinic; D. A.Wiegmann, U. of Wisconsin, Developing a Toolfor Reliably Identifying Distractions <strong>and</strong> InterruptionsDuring SurgeryWednesdayOct. 21OCTOBER 21 – WEDNESDAY 17


WednesdayOct. 212. Ranieri Yung Ing Koh, Xi Yang, <strong>and</strong> ShanqingYin, Nanyang Technological U.; Lay Teng Ong,KK Women’s <strong>and</strong> Children’s Hospital; YoelDonchin, Hadassah Medical Center, Jerusalem;Taezoon Park, Nanyang Technological U.,Measuring Attention Patterns <strong>and</strong> Expertiseof Scrub Nurses in the Operating Theatre inRelation to Reducing Errors in SurgicalCounts3. Jason M. Slagle, Shilo Anders, Charles Calderwood,<strong>and</strong> Matthew B. Weinger, V<strong>and</strong>erbilt U., SignificantPhysiological Disturbances in CasesWith <strong>and</strong> Without Nonroutine Events: AnAnalysis of Videotaped Anesthetics4. J. Elin Bahner-Heyne <strong>and</strong> S. Roettger, Berlin Inst.of Technology; D. Schulze-Kissing, German AerospaceCenter (DLR); Dietrich Manzey, BerlinInst. of Technology, Automation in Surgery:The Surgeons’ Perspective on <strong>Human</strong><strong>Factors</strong> Issues of Image-Guided Navigation5. S. Henrickson Parker, U. of Aberdeen; R. Wadhera,Cambridge U.; D. A. Wiegmann, U. of Wisconsin;T. M. Sundt, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine,The Impact of Protocolized CommunicationDuring Cardiac SurgeryID1 – INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN PERCEP-TION, COGNITION,AND PERFORMANCELectureWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Republic A (Level Four)Individual Differences1. Tyler H. Shaw, George Mason U.; GeraldMatthews, U. of Cincinnati; Victor S. Finomore,Oak Ridge Inst. for Science <strong>and</strong> Education; Joel S.Warm, U.S. Air Force Research Lab, PredictingVigilance Performance <strong>and</strong> Stress With IndividualDifference Measures2. April Rose Panganiban <strong>and</strong> Gerald Matthews, U.of Cincinnati; Eva Hudlicka, Psychometrix Associates,Trait Anxiety <strong>and</strong> Affective Bias inTactical Decision Making3. Bo Ou, Changxu Wu, <strong>and</strong> Guozhen Zhao, U. atBuffalo, SUNY, P300 Amplitude <strong>and</strong> LatencyReflect Individual Difference of NavigationPerformance in a Driving Task4. Meike Jipp <strong>and</strong> Essameddin Badreddin, U. ofHeidelberg, A Comparison of the Relevanceof Between-Subject <strong>and</strong> Within-Subject Variancefor an Intention Estimation Behaviorfor Wheelchair Users5. Heather C. Lum, Valerie K. Sims, Matthew G.Chin, <strong>and</strong> Nicholas C. Lagattuta, U. of CentralFlorida, Perceptions of <strong>Human</strong>s WearingTechnologyME3 – APPLICATIONS IN MACROERGONOMICSLectureWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Bowie A (Level Two)MacroergonomicsChair: Holly S. Wick, 3M Co.1. Elizabeth Haro, Yu-Hsiu Hung, <strong>and</strong> Hyun SeungYoo, Virginia Tech; Robin Littlejohn, MississippiState U., Implicit Biases in Blame Allocationof Accidents Across Organizational Components(Worker, Supervisor, <strong>and</strong> Organization)2. Teresa Zayas-Cabán, Agency for HealthcareResearch <strong>and</strong> Quality; Jenna L. Marquard, U. ofMassachusetts, Amherst, A Holistic <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>Evaluation Framework for the Design ofConsumer Health Informatics Interventions3. S<strong>and</strong>ra K. Garrett, Clemson U.; Barrett S. Caldwell,Purdue U.; Shawn T. Collins, Rolls-Royce, SupportingExpertise Coordination in MultidisciplinaryProject Teams4. Alison R. Heller-Ono, County of Monterey, 21stCentury <strong>Ergonomics</strong>: A Lean Approach to<strong>Ergonomics</strong> Process Design <strong>and</strong> Management5. Valerie J. Berg Rice, U.S. Army Research Lab,Evaluating <strong>and</strong> Designing Education: A CollaborativeEffort Between Educators <strong>and</strong>ErgonomistsSD2 – FOCUS ON HUMAN-SYSTEMSINTEGRATIONLectureWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Republic C (Level Four)System DevelopmentChair: Shannon Foley, U.S. Naval Surface WarfareCenter Dahlgren; Melissa Weaver, BCI, Inc.1. Darren P. Wilson, Dept. of Homel<strong>and</strong> Security;Thomas B. Malone, Carlow International Inc.;Janae Lockett-Reynolds, Dept. of Homel<strong>and</strong>Security; Elizabeth L. Wilson, Caden JamesEnterprises, A Vision for <strong>Human</strong>-SystemsIntegration in the U. S. Department ofHomel<strong>and</strong> Security2. Raegan M. Hoeft <strong>and</strong> Helena M. Mentis,Lockheed Martin, Beyond User-CenteredDesign: Applicable Concepts fromComplementary Approaches3. Tareq Ahram <strong>and</strong> Waldemar Karwowski, U. ofCentral Florida, <strong>Human</strong>-Systems IntegrationModeling Using Systems Modeling Language18 OCTOBER 21 – WEDNESDAY


WednesdayOct. 21<strong>Ergonomics</strong>9. Xiaolu Jing, Scott Fulmer, <strong>and</strong> Bryan Buchholz,U. of Massachusetts, Lowell, Posture, Activities,Tools, <strong>and</strong> H<strong>and</strong>ling Analysis for FloorCoverers Focusing on the Knee10. Symone A. Miguez <strong>and</strong> Peter Vink, Delft U. ofTechnology; M. Susan Hallbeck, U. of Nebraska –Lincoln, Participatory <strong>Ergonomics</strong> GeneratesNew Product to Assist Rural Workers inGreenhouses11. Aishwarya Yalamarty, Varun V. Jampana, Naira H.Campbell-Kyureghyan, <strong>and</strong> Karen N. Cooper, U.of Louisville, Effect of Electric Utility LinemanGloves on Strength <strong>and</strong> Efficiency12. Karla Eve Allan, U.S. Army Natick SoldierResearch, Development, & Engineering Center,Evaluating Suitability of a Military DutyGlove for Use in a Multilayered Chemical-Biological Protective Glove SystemTeams13. Heather A. Priest, U.S. Army Research Inst.;C. Shawn Burke <strong>and</strong> Eduardo Salas, U. of CentralFlorida, Initial, Individual Decisions to Trustin Newly Forming Teams: What Is the Impactof “Not Knowing”?14. Michael A. Rosen, Eduardo Salas, Stephen M.Fiore, Davin Pavlas, <strong>and</strong> Heather C. Lum, U. ofCentral Florida, Team Cognition <strong>and</strong> ExternalRepresentations: A Framework <strong>and</strong> Propositionsfor Supporting Collaborative ProblemSolving15. Thomas D. Fincannon, A. William Evans, FlorianJentsch, Elizabeth Phillips, <strong>and</strong> Joseph R. Keebler,U. of Central Florida, Effects of Sharing Controlof Unmanned Vehicles on Backup Behavior<strong>and</strong> Workload in Distributed Operator TeamsAuditory Topics16. Bradley M. Davis, U.S. Army Research Lab;Woodrow W. Winchester <strong>and</strong> Jason D. Zedlitz,Virginia Tech, Auditory Visualization of L<strong>and</strong>mineDetector Sensor Data17. Cheng Li Wei <strong>and</strong> Chua Wei Liang Kenny, DSONational Labs, Association Testing – A Methodologyfor Selecting <strong>and</strong> Evaluating AudioAlert18. Jaimie L. Gilbert, Kelly S. Steelman-Allen,Charissa R. Lansing, Jason S. McCarley, <strong>and</strong>Arthur F. Kramer, U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Effect of Overheard Conversationson Byst<strong>and</strong>er ProductivityComplex Environments19. Peter Squire, U.S. Naval Surface Warfare Center;Jane H. Barrow, Kevin T. Durkee, Mac Smith,Jennifer Moore, <strong>and</strong> Raja Parasuraman, GeorgeMason U., Runway Incursion Monitoring,Detection, <strong>and</strong> Alerting System (RIMDAS):A Proposed System Design for ReducingRunway Incursions20. Jamie C. Gorman, Nancy J. Cooke, <strong>and</strong> Jasmine L.Duran, Arizona State U.; Kimberly McGrane <strong>and</strong>Noel Rima, Cognitive Engineering Research Inst.,Representing Workflow Within the Air OperationsCenter: The Lifecycle of a DynamicTarget21. Jacquelyn M. Crebolder <strong>and</strong> Jeffrey Beardsall,Defence Research & Development Canada,Visual Alerting in Complex Comm<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong>Control EnvironmentsDriving22. J. Christopher Brill, Michigan Technological U.;Mustapha Mouloua <strong>and</strong> Edwin Shirkey, U. ofCentral Florida; Pascal Alberti, Université deTechnologie de Compiègne, Predictive Validityof the Aggressive Driver Behavior Questionnaire(ADBQ) in a Simulated Environment23. Lisa Durrance Blalock <strong>and</strong> Benjamin D. Sawyer,Colorado State U.; Ariana Kiken, California StateU., Long Beach; Benjamin A. Clegg, ColoradoState U., The Impact of Load on DynamicVersus Static Situational Knowledge WhileDriving24. Mary F. Lesch <strong>and</strong> William J. Horrey, LibertyMutual Research Inst. for Safety; Ying Wang, WeiZhang, <strong>and</strong> Chang-Rong Chen, Tsinghua U.,Impact of Feedback on Drivers’ AttitudesToward Driving While Distracted: A Studyin China25. Laura Stanley <strong>and</strong> Jessica Mueller, MontanaState U., Effectiveness of a Multistage DriverEducation <strong>Program</strong> for Novice Drivers26. David Libbey <strong>and</strong> Alex Chaparro, Wichita StateU., Text Messaging Versus Talking on a CellPhone: A Comparison of Their Effects onDriving PerformancePotpourri27. Felix Portnoy <strong>and</strong> Poornima Madhavan, OldDominion U., Current Trends in <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong><strong>and</strong> <strong>Ergonomics</strong> Employment28. A. Blechko, I. T. Darker, <strong>and</strong> A. G. Gale, LoughboroughU., The Role of Emotion RecognitionFrom Nonverbal Behavior in Detection ofConcealed Firearm Carrying29. Nash S. Stanton, Stuart A. Ragsdale, <strong>and</strong> ErnestoA. Bustamante, U. of Idaho, The Effects ofSystem Technology <strong>and</strong> Probability Type onTrust, Compliance, <strong>and</strong> Reliance30. Jeffrey J. Smith <strong>and</strong> Edward J. Grenchus, IBMCorp., Beyond the First User: <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong><strong>and</strong> Risk Communication for Reuse, Recycling,Disassembly, <strong>and</strong> Product End-of-Life20 OCTOBER 21 – WEDNESDAY


31. Elizabeth H. Lazzara, Marissa Shuffler, MichaelA. Rosen, Luiz Xavier, Samuel R. Wooten II, <strong>and</strong>Eduardo Salas, U. of Central Florida; SteveZaccaro, George Mason U.; Rita Hilton, MirumCorp., Identifying the Best Practices for CriticalSocial Thinking <strong>and</strong> Metacognitive ThinkingTraining32. M. Sublette, C. Melody Carswell, Russel C. Grant,M. Klein, W. B. Seales, <strong>and</strong> Duncan Clarke, U.of Kentucky, Anticipated Versus ExperiencedWorkload: How Accurately Can People PredictTask Dem<strong>and</strong>?33. Jasmine L. Duran, Zach Goolsbee, Nancy J.Cooke, <strong>and</strong> Jamie C. Gorman, Arizona State U.,Embedded Collaboration Metrics in theMacroCog Synthetic Task EnvironmentWednesday, October 2112:00 noon to 1:30 p.m.Technical Group Business MeetingsAgingBonham E (Level Three)12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. (lunch)Perception <strong>and</strong> PerformanceMission A (Level Two)12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. (lunch)Wednesday, October 211:30 to 3:00 p.m.Technical SessionsCE6 – JUDGMENT, DECISION MAKING,ANDEXPERTISELectureWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Jennifer Ockerman, Johns Hopkins U.; Cochair:Mark St. John, Pacific Science <strong>and</strong> Engineering Group1. Dapeng Cao, Theresa K. Guarrera, MichaelJenkins, Priyadarshini R. Pennathur, <strong>and</strong> Ann M.Bisantz, U. at Buffalo, SUNY; Richard T. Stone,Iowa State U.; Michael Farry <strong>and</strong> Jonathan Pfautz,Charles River Analytics, Inc.; Emily Roth, RothCognitive Engineering, Evaluating the Creation<strong>and</strong> Interpretation of Causal Influence Models2. C. Dominik Güss, U. of North Florida; JarrettEvans, Florida State U.; Devon Murray, U. ofNorth Florida; Harald Schaub, IABG mbH <strong>and</strong>Otto-Friedrich Universität Bamberg, ConsciousVersus Unconscious Processing in DynamicDecision-Making Tasks3. Jennifer Tsai <strong>and</strong> Alex Kirlik, U. of Illinois atUrbana-Champaign, Expert Judgment in aHeterogeneous Task Environment4. Jonathan Pfautz, David Koelle, <strong>and</strong> Eric Carlson,Charles River Analytics, Inc.; Emilie Roth, RothCognitive Engineering, Complexities <strong>and</strong> Challengesin the Use of Bayesian Belief Networks:Informing the Design of Causal InfluenceModels5. Lawrence G. Shattuck, Nita Lewis Miller, <strong>and</strong>Kacey Kemmerer, U.S. Naval Postgraduate School,Tactical Decision Making Under Conditionsof Uncertainty: An Empirical StudyCE7 – INTERACTING WITH SINGLE ANDMULTIPLE AUTOMATED AIDSInvited SymposiumWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Poornima Madhavan, Old Dominion U.1. Poornima Madhavan, Old Dominion U.,Interacting With Single <strong>and</strong> Multiple AutomatedAids2. Ernesto A. Bustamante, U. of Idaho, A Reexaminationof the Mediating Effect of Trust AmongAlarm Systems’ Characteristics <strong>and</strong> <strong>Human</strong>Compliance <strong>and</strong> Reliance3. David Keller <strong>and</strong> Stephen Rice, New MexicoState U., How Is the Reliability of AutomatedAids Determined Using System-Wide Trust?4. Ellen Haas, Susan Hill, Christopher Stachowkiak,<strong>and</strong> MaryAnne Fields, U.S. Army Research Lab,Designing <strong>and</strong> Evaluating a Multimodal Interfacefor Soldier-Swarm Interaction5. Penelope M. S<strong>and</strong>erson, U. of Queensl<strong>and</strong>,Auditory Alarms for Medical Equipment:How Do We Ensure They Convey TheirMeanings?6. James P. Bliss, Old Dominion U., Faith VersusTrust: The Influence of Situational Experienceon Perceived Signal Credibility, <strong>and</strong> aDistinction Between ConstructsWednesdayOct. 21OCTOBER 21 – WEDNESDAY 21


WednesdayOct. 21ED1 – ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN: OFFICE EN-VIRONMENT CONSIDERATIONS & STUDENTISSUESLectureWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Republic A (Level Four)Environmental DesignChair: Conne Bazley, JimConna Inc.; Cochair: MichelleRobertson, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for Safety1. Alan Hedge <strong>and</strong> Daniel E. Gaygen, Cornell U.,Office Environmental Conditions <strong>and</strong>Computer Work Performance2. Paul Allie <strong>and</strong> Douglas Kokot, Kokot <strong>and</strong> AllieAssociates, LLC; Cynthia Purvis <strong>and</strong> Michael C.Bartha, Hewlett-Packard Co., Computer DisplayPlacement for Progressive Addition LensWearers: A Field Observation of MultipleDisplay Conditions3. Karen Jacobs, Victoria Hall, Erin Brownson,Elizabeth Ansong, Jackie Markowitz, MattMcKinnon, Sofia Steinberg, Alex<strong>and</strong>er Ing, <strong>and</strong>Ellen Wuest, Boston U.; Peter Johnson, U. ofWashington; Jack T. Dennerlein, Harvard U.,The Notebook Computing ExperienceAmong University Students4. H. C. M. (Jettie) Hoonhout, Philips Research;M. Knoop, Philips Lighting; Ruben VanPol, U.of Maastricht, Colored Lighting in Offices theNew Caffeine? Looking into PerformanceEffects of Colored Lighting5. Ruth A. K. Loewenhardt, Elegant Ergo, A CaseStudy on the Backpack Weight of SchoolStudentsGS4 – ARNOLD M. SMALL LECTURE IN SAFETYInvited AddressWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Travis C/D (Level Three)General Sessions; cosponsored by SafetyChair: Michael J. Kalsher, Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst.Rebekah A. Salazar, U.S. Border PatrolHP2 – MODELING HUMAN PERFORMANCE INTHE ENVIRONMENTAL CONTEXTLectureWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Republic C (Level Four)<strong>Human</strong> Performance ModelingChair: Charneta Samms, U.S. Army Research Lab;Cochair: Linda Boyle, U. of Iowa1. Matthew L. Bolton <strong>and</strong> Ellen J. Bass, U. ofVirginia, A Method for the Formal Verificationof <strong>Human</strong>-Interactive Systems2. Christopher D. Wickens, Alion Science & TechnologyMA&D Operations; Jason S. McCarley<strong>and</strong> Kelly S. Steelman-Allen, U. of Illinois atUrbana-Champaign; Angelia Sebok <strong>and</strong> JulieBzostek, Alion Science & Technology MA&DOperations; Nadine Sarter, U. of Michigan,NT-SEEV: A Model of Attention Capture<strong>and</strong> Noticing on the Flight Deck3. Kelly S. Steelman-Allen <strong>and</strong> Jason S. McCarley, U.of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Christopher D.Wickens, Angelia Sebok, <strong>and</strong> Julie Bzostek,Alion Science & Technology MA&D Operations,N-SEEV: A Computational Model of Attention<strong>and</strong> Noticing4. Michael Lewis, U. of Pittsburgh; Jijun Wang,Quantum Leap Innovations, Inc., MeasuringCoordination Dem<strong>and</strong> in Multirobot Teams5. Steven J. L<strong>and</strong>ry, Purdue U., A Belief-BasedModel of Air Traffic Controllers PerformingSeparation AssuranceI1 – NAVIGATIONLectureWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Seguin (Level Four)Internet; cosponsored by Computer SystemsChair: Marc L. Resnick, Florida International U.;Cochair: John Ruffner, Serco, Inc.1. Marc L. Resnick <strong>and</strong> Amir Baker, Florida InternationalU., The Effect of Scent on UserRecall <strong>and</strong> Navigation2. John W. Ruffner <strong>and</strong> Nina P. Deibler, Serco, Inc.;Christine L. Holiday, Timothy H. Isenberg, <strong>and</strong>Angela J. Hutton, Defense Ammunition Center,The Hyperbolic Browser as a Tool for InformationVisualization, Discovery, <strong>and</strong> Retrievalon the Web <strong>and</strong> Enterprise Intranets3. Byung Don Kong, Jung Sang Min, <strong>and</strong> RoHaeMyung, U. of Korea, Menu Design forTouchscreen Interfaces4. Ralph H. Cullen, Marita A. O’Brien, Wendy A.Rogers, <strong>and</strong> Arthur D. Fisk, Georgia Tech, ThePersistence of Content Knowledge5. Keena S. Byrd, Intel Corp.; Barrett S. Caldwell,Purdue U., From UMPCs to Cell Phones:How Does Diminishing Screen Real EstateAffect Screen Access <strong>and</strong> Working Memory?22 OCTOBER 21 – WEDNESDAY


PD3 – PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS OFPRODUCT DESIGN TOOLSLectureWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Bowie B (Level Two)Product DesignChair: Steven Belz, AT&T; Cochair: Jason A. Droll,Exponent1. Kihyo Jung, POSTECH; Ochae Kwon, SamsungElectronics; Heecheon You, POSTECH, Developmentof the Boundary Zone Method for Generationof Representative <strong>Human</strong> Models2. Barbara Jex Courter, Aerospace Corp.; Ellen M.Ellis, U.S. Air Force, <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> Considerationsin Global Positioning System (GPS)Receiver Technology: Contrasting MilitaryTechnical Requirements With User Expectations3. Craig P. Conner, Design Concepts, Inc., IterativeQualitative Research Used to Inform <strong>and</strong>Validate the Design of a Commercial FloorFinish Applicator4. Craig P. Conner <strong>and</strong> Curt B. Irwin, DesignConcepts, Inc., EMG <strong>and</strong> Heart Rate Usedto Validate Ergonomic Benefits of a Bent-H<strong>and</strong>led Floor Finish Applicator5. Manuel Meza <strong>and</strong> Patrick Patterson, Texas TechU.; Hidetoshi Nakayasu, Konan U., Useful Fieldof View of Aging Drivers as a Product DesignTool for In-Vehicle Visual AidsPP2 – AUDITORY PERCEPTION ANDPERFORMANCELectureWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Republic B (Level Four)Perception & PerformanceChair: Paul Havig, U.S. Air Force Research Lab;Cochair: Felix Portnoy, Old Dominion U.1. Jane H. Barrow <strong>and</strong> Carryl L. Baldwin, GeorgeMason U., Semantic Versus Spatial AudioCues: Is There a Downside to SemanticCueing?2. Chua Wei Liang Kenny <strong>and</strong> Cheng Li Wei, DSONational Labs, An Evaluation of Icon, Tone,<strong>and</strong> Speech Cues for Detecting Anomalies<strong>and</strong> Auditory Communications for OnboardMilitary Vehicle Displays3. Myounghoon Jeon <strong>and</strong> Bruce N. Walker, GeorgiaTech, “Spindex”: Accelerated Initial SpeechSounds Improve Navigation Performance inAuditory Menus4. Raymond M. Stanley <strong>and</strong> Bruce N. Walker,Georgia Tech, Intelligibility of Bone-ConductedSpeech at Different Locations Compared toAir-Conducted Speech5. T. Claire Davies, U. of Auckl<strong>and</strong>; Shane D.Pinder, Auckl<strong>and</strong> U. of Technology; Catherine M.Burns, U. of Waterloo, How Far Is That Wall?Judging Distance With AudificationSF3 – STUDENT RESEARCH IN HEALTH CARELectureWednesday, October 21, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Travis A/B (Level Three)Student Forum; cosponsored by Health CareChair: Ewart de Visser, George Mason U.; Cochair:Sarah Grigg, Clemson U.1. Thomas Ferris <strong>and</strong> Nadine Sarter, U. of Michigan,Supporting Anesthetic Monitoring ThroughTactile Display of Physiological Parameters2. Nicole Fink, Richard Pak, <strong>and</strong> Dina Battisto,Clemson U., Prospective Memory in theNursing Environment: Effects of Type ofProspective Task <strong>and</strong> Prospective Load3. Margaux M. Price <strong>and</strong> Richard Pak, Clemson U.;Hendrik Muller <strong>and</strong> Aideen Stronge, Google,Inc.; Jesse Breedlove, Clemson U., ExaminingNoncritical Health Information Seeking: ANeeds Analysis for Personal Health Records4. P. P. Morita, U. of Campinas; Catherine M. Burns,U. of Waterloo; S. J. Calil, U. of Campinas, TheInfluence of Strong Recommendations, GoodIncident Reports, <strong>and</strong> a Monitoring SystemOver an Incident Investigation System forHealth Care FacilitiesWednesday, October 213:00 to 6:30 p.m.Technical Group Business MeetingsAerospace SystemsRepublic B (Level Four)3:00 to 5:00 p.m.Cognitive Engineering <strong>and</strong> Decision MakingLone Star D (Level Two)4:30 to 6:00 p.m.WednesdayOct. 21OCTOBER 21 – WEDNESDAY 23


<strong>Program</strong> at a Glance8:30 – 10:00 a.m.10:30 – 12:00 noon1:30 – 3:00 p.m.MondaySF1Student Career <strong>and</strong> Professional DevelopmentDay, Lone Star Ballroom EForums, 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.HCF Health Care Forum, Bonham EPDF Professional Development Forum, Bowie BMorning-Only Workshops, 8:30 a.m. – 12:00noonWK2 Cognitive Crash Dummies, Republic BFull-Day Workshops, 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.WK5 User Interface Design Prototyping, Travis C/DWK6 Cognitive Systems Engineering, Bowie CWK9 Be an Effective HF/E Expert Witness, Seguin BWK10 <strong>Human</strong>-Centered Systems Engineering, Republic AWK12 Rapid In-Depth Task Analysis, Travis A/BStudent Career <strong>and</strong> Professional DevelopmentDay continuesForums continueMorning-Only Workshop continuesFull-Day Workshops continueStudent Career <strong>and</strong> Professional DevelopmentDay continuesForums continueFull-Day Workshops continueAfternoon-Only Workshops, 1:30 – 5:00 p.m.WK3 Engineering Resilience, Republic BWK4 Communications Analysis, Bowie ATuesday8:00 – 10:15 a.m.PL Opening Plenary Session, Texas Ballroom A/B/CAS1CE1FP1GS1HC1IE1PD1PP1SD1T1Air Traffic Control, Republic A<strong>Human</strong>-Robot Interaction, Lone Star Ballroom DForensic Consulting Firms, Bowie APresident's Forum, Lone Star Ballroom EHealth Information Technologies, Travis A/BTrunk & Low Back, SeguinSparking Innovation, Bowie BVigilance Performance, Republic BHF Impacting Design, Travis C/DCognitive <strong>Factors</strong> in Training, Republic CCE2 Cognitive Task Analysis, Lone Star Ballroom DCS1 Collaboration,Trust, & Security, SeguinDEM1 Demonstrations Session 1, Republic A/BGS2 Future of HF/E Research, Lone Star Ballroom EHP1 100 Years of Queuing Theory, Travis A/BME1 Critical Care Technology, Travis C/DPOS1 Technical & Lab Posters, Lone Star BallroomCorridorS1 <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> in Weapons Safety, Bowie AST1 Distraction & Workload, Bowie BTE1 How Would You Test This? Bowie C3:30 – 5:00 p.m.Student Career <strong>and</strong> Professional DevelopmentDay continuesForums continueFull-Day Workshops continueAfternoon-Only Workshops continueAC1CE3FP2HC2IE2ME2PD2SF2T2VE1Augmented Cognition, Lone Star Ballroom ESupporting Complex Work, Lone Star Ballroom DIssues in Forensics, Bowie <strong>AM</strong>edical Informatics, Travis A/BBiomechanical Analysis, SeguinConstruction Safety, Travis C/DUser-Centered Design Award, Bowie BStable Career in Unstable Market, Republic BTraining Cycle for Trust Training, Republic CVirtual Reality for Training, Republic AEvening4:45 – 6:15 p.m.National <strong>Ergonomics</strong> Month Session, Lone Star E5:30 – 6:30 p.m.First-Timers Reception, Texas Ballroom D6:30 – 9:00 p.m.Gala Opening Reception, Texas Ballroom D/E/F5:00 – 6:00 p.m.Student Reception, Texas Ballroom A6:00 – 7:00 p.m.<strong>HFES</strong> Business Meeting, Republic BPROGR<strong>AM</strong> AT A GLANCE


WednesdayThursdayFridayA1AS2CE4CE5GS3HC3ID1ME3SD2ST2Older Worker Retention, Bowie BFlight Display Design, Republic B<strong>Human</strong>-Computer Etiquette, Lone StarBallroom DRasmussen’s S-R-K, Lone Star Ballroom EGeneral Sessions Potpourri I, Travis C/D<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> in Surgery I, Travis A/BIndividual Differences, Republic <strong>AM</strong>acroergonomics, Bowie A<strong>Human</strong>-Systems Integration, Republic CDriver Perception, SeguinA2CE8GS5HC4HP3ME4PP3S2SD3T3Aging Potpourri, Bowie BTeam Performance, Lone Star Ballroom D<strong>Human</strong> Reliability, Bowie CAmbulatory/Outpatient Care, Travis A/BSynthetic Agents, SeguinHF in Academic Settings, Travis C/DVisual Search, Republic BSafety Potpourri, Bowie AHF Across Business Sectors, Republic CSimulation-Based Training, Republic ACE12 Displays & Controls, Lone Star Ballroom AHC8 Health Care Potpourri, SeguinIE4 Applications of Industrial <strong>Ergonomics</strong>, Lone StarBallroom BME6 Macroergonomics in Education, Republic APD5 Usability Evaluation Environment, Bowie BPP5 Perception & Performance Potpourri, Republic BSF6 Student Research On Memory & Attention,Lone Star Ballroom CT4 Enhancing Training Effectiveness, Bowie ADEM2 Demonstrations Session 2, Republic A/B/CPOS2 Technical Posters, Lone Star Ballroom CorridorAS3C1CE9HC5ME5PD4S3SF4ST3Cognitive <strong>Factors</strong> in ATC, Republic ACommunications From Near & Afar, Seguin<strong>Human</strong>-Automation Interaction, Lone StarBallroom DUser-Created Cognitive Artifacts, Travis A/BHF in Organizational Complexity, Travis C/DDeconstructing Product Design, Bowie BManaging Safety, Bowie AStudent Research Potpourri, Republic BHMI & Road Infrastructure, Lone Star Ballroom EAS5 System <strong>Factors</strong> in Aerospace Ops, Republic BCE13 Complex Environments, Lone Star Ballroom ACE14 Cognitive <strong>Factors</strong>, Lone Star Ballroom BHC9 Interruptions in Health Care, SeguinHP5 <strong>Human</strong> Performance Modeling Potpourri,Republic APD6 Improving Product Design, Bowie BS5 Construction & Mining Safety, Bowie ACE6CE7ED1GS4HP2I1PD3PP2SF3Judgment, Decision Making & Expertise, LoneStar Ballroom DAutomated Aids, Lone Star Ballroom EOffice Environments, Republic AArnold Small Lecture in Safety, Travis C/DModeling <strong>Human</strong> Performance, Republic CNavigation, SeguinProduct Design Tools, Bowie BAuditory Perception & Performance, Republic BStudent Research in Health Care, Travis A/BCE10 Analyzing Cognitive Work, Lone Star Ballroom DED2 Aging & Disability Considerations, Travis C/DFP3 FP Research to Practice, Bowie AGS6 General Sessions Potpourri II, Bowie CHC6 HF in Patient-Centered Care, Travis A/BHP4 Integrative Models, SeguinIE3 Upper Extremities, Lone Star Ballroom EPOS3 Technical & Lab Posters, Lone Star BallroomCorridorPP4 Performing via Interfaces, Republic BTE2 Test & Evaluation Potpourri, Bowie BVE2 Methodologies & Techniques, Republic A3:00 – 6:30 p.m.Technical Group Business Meetings (see pp. 4–5)AS4 Impact of Displays, Republic ACE11 <strong>Human</strong>-Automation Interaction, Lone StarBallroom DE1 Methods, Projects, & Pedagogy, Bowie CED3 Environmental Design Potpourri, Travis C/DHC7 <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> in Surgery – II, Travis A/BI2 Input & Output, SeguinS4 Safety & Risk Communications, Bowie ASD4 HF Requirements, Republic CSF5 Student Research in Physical <strong>Ergonomics</strong>,Republic BST4 Warnings & In-Vehicle Systems, Lone StarBallroom EPROGR<strong>AM</strong> AT A GLANCE


WednesdayOct. 21CommunicationsSeguin (Level Four)3:30 to 4:30 p.m.Computer Systems (with Internet)Seguin (Level Four)5:30 to 6:30 p.m.Environmental Design (withMacroergonomics)Lone Star E (Level Two)3:15 to 4:30 p.m.Forensics Professional (with Safety)Republic A (Level Four)3:30 to 4:30 p.m.Health CareTravis A/B (Level Three)3:15 to 4:30 p.m.<strong>Human</strong> Performance ModelingTravis A/B (Level Three)5:30 to 6:30 p.m.Industrial <strong>Ergonomics</strong>Travis C/D (Level Three)4:00 to 5:30 p.m.Internet (with Computer Systems)Seguin (Level Four)5:30 to 6:30 p.m.Macroergonomics (with EnvironmentalDesign)Lone Star E (Level Two)3:15 to 4:30 p.m.Safety (with Forensics Professional)Republic A (Level Four)3:30 to 4:30 p.m.Surface TransportationRepublic A (Level Four)5:00 to 6:30 p.m.TrainingBowie B (Level Two)3:30 to 4:30 p.m.Virtual EnvironmentsBowie A (Level Two)3:30 to 4:30 p.m.Thursday, October 228:30 to 10:00 a.m.Technical SessionsA2 – AGING POTPOURRILectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Bowie B (Level Two)AgingChair: Richard Pak, Clemson U.; Cochair: ChristopherMayhorn, North Carolina State U.1. Jessie Chin, Laura D’Andrea, Dan Morrow, <strong>and</strong>Elizabeth A. L. Stine-Morrow, U. of Illinois atUrbana-Champaign; Thembi Conner-Garcia <strong>and</strong>James Graumlich, U. of Illinois College of Medicine;Michael Murray, U. of North Carolina,Cognition <strong>and</strong> Illness Experience Are AssociatedWith Illness Knowledge Among OlderAdults With Hypertension2. Carryl L. Baldwin, George Mason U., HearingLevels Affect Higher-Order Cognitive Performance3. Sara J. Czaja, U. of Miami Miller School ofMedicine; Joseph Sharit, U. of Miami; SankaranN. Nair <strong>and</strong> Chin Chin Lee, U. of Miami MillerSchool of Medicine, Older Adults <strong>and</strong> InternetHealth Information Seeking4. Jenay M. Beer, Arthur D. Fisk, <strong>and</strong> Wendy A.Rogers, Georgia Tech, Emotion Recognitionof Virtual Agents’ Facial Expressions: TheEffects of Age <strong>and</strong> Emotion Intensity5. Neta Ezer, Arthur D. Fisk, <strong>and</strong> Wendy A. Rogers,Georgia Tech, More Than a Servant: Self-Reported Willingness of Younger <strong>and</strong> OlderAdults to Having a Robot Perform Interactive<strong>and</strong> Critical Tasks in the HomeCE8 – MEASURING AND SUPPORTING TE<strong>AM</strong>PERFORMANCELectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Lone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Richard Stone, Iowa State U.; Cochair: JenniferTsai, U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign1. Heather C. Lum, Valerie K. Sims, Nicholas C.Lagattuta, Michael A. Rosen, <strong>and</strong> Eduardo Salas,U. of Central Florida, Eye Movements <strong>and</strong>Reliance on External Memory Aids PredictTeam Success in a Military Planning Task24 OCTOBER 21 – WEDNESDAY


2. R. Dirk Beer, Harvey S. Smallman, <strong>and</strong> Frank C.Lacson, Pacific Science & Engineering Group,Cue Validity, Availability, <strong>and</strong> Strategies:Finding Experts in Networked Teams Usingthe Team Map Tool3. Matthieu Branlat, Ohio State U.; Lisa Fern, NASAAmes Research Center; Martin Voshell, Ohio StateU.; Stoney Trent, U.S. Military Academy, Underst<strong>and</strong>ingCoordination Challenges in UrbanFirefighting: A Study of Critical IncidentReports4. S<strong>and</strong>ro Scielzo, Laura D. Strater, <strong>and</strong> Michelle L.Tinsley, SA Technologies, Inc.; Diane M.Ungvarsky, U.S. Army Research Lab; Mica R.Endlsey, SA Technologies, Inc., Developinga Subjective Shared Situation AwarenessInventory for Teams5. Bimal Balakrishnan, U. of Missouri; Mark S. Pfaff,Indiana U. – Indianapolis; Michael D. McNeese<strong>and</strong> Varun Adibhatla, Pennsylvania State U.,NeoCITIES Geo-Tools: Assessing Impact ofPerceptual Anchoring <strong>and</strong> SpatiallyAnnotated Chat on Geo CollaborationGS5 – IS HUMAN RELIABILITY RELEVANT TOHUMAN FACTORS?Discussion PanelThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Bowie C (Level Two)General SessionsChair: Ronald Laurids Boring, S<strong>and</strong>ia National Labs;Cochair: Sherry Chappell, SA Technologies, Inc.Panelists: Emilie Roth, Roth Cognitive Engineering;Oliver Straeter, U. of Kassel; Karin Laumann, NorwegianTechnical <strong>and</strong> Science U.; Harold S. Blackman,Idaho National Lab; Johanna Oxstr<strong>and</strong>, VattenfallRinghals AB; Julius J. Persensky, U.S. Nuclear RegulatoryCommissionHC4 – BEYOND THE HOSPITAL: HUMANFACTORS AND ERGONOMICS ISSUES IN THE<strong>AM</strong>BULATORY/OUTPATIENT CARE SETTINGDiscussion PanelThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Travis A/B (Level Three)Health CareChair: Carla J. Alvarado, U. of Wisconsin – MadisonPanelists: Ben-Tzion Karsh, U. of Wisconsin –Madison; Meghan M. Dierks, Havard Medical School;Christopher Nemeth, Klein Associates Division ofApplied Research Associates; Robert L. Wears, U. ofFlorida; Tosha Wetterneck, U. of WisconsinHP3 – SYNTHETIC AGENTS AS FULL-FLEDGEDTE<strong>AM</strong>MATESDiscussion PanelThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Seguin (Level Four)<strong>Human</strong> Performance Modeling; cosponsored byCognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Christopher W. Myers, Cognitive EngineeringResearch Inst.Panelists: Wayne Zachary, CHI Systems, Inc.; Nancy J.Cooke, Arizona State U.; Michael Lewis, U. of Pittsburgh;Michael D. McNeese, Pennsylvania State U.;Bradley Best, Adaptive Cognitive Systems, LLCME4 – HUMAN FACTORS APPLICATIONS INACADEMIC SETTINGSDiscussion PanelThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Travis C/D (Level Three)Macroergonomics; cosponsored by EducationChair: Petra Alfred, U.S. Army Research Lab–HREDPanelists: Carita DeVilbiss, Donald Headley, <strong>and</strong>Valerie J. Rice, U.S. Army Research Lab–HRED;Conne Bazley, JimConna, Inc.; Karen Jacobs, BostonU.; Nancy Vause, MRMCPP3 – VISUAL SEARCHLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Republic B (Level Four)Perception & PerformanceChair: Gretchen Anderson, Boeing; Cochair: John Morris,Texas Tech U.1. Douglas J. Gillan, North Carolina State U.; DouglasSorensen, U. of Idaho, Minimalism <strong>and</strong> theSyntax of Graphs: II. Effects of GraphBackgrounds on Visual Search2. Kenneth Hailston, Georgia Tech, The Effects ofMultiple-Feature Priming on Identifying <strong>and</strong>Localizing Visual Targets3. Robert Rauschenberger, James Jeng-Weei Lin,Xianjun Sam Zheng, <strong>and</strong> Chris Lafleur, SiemensCorporate Research, Subset Search for Icons ofDifferent Spatial Frequencies4. Jason S. McCarley, U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Response Criterion PlacementModulates the Benefits of Graded AlertingSystems in a Simulated Baggage-ScreeningTaskThursdayOct. 22OCTOBER 22 – THURSDAY 25


ThursdayOct. 225 Evan M. Palmer, Christopher M. Brown, <strong>and</strong>Carolina F. Bates, Wichita State U.; Philip J.Kellman, U. of California, Los Angeles; TimothyC. Clausner, U. of Maryl<strong>and</strong>, Perceptual Cues<strong>and</strong> Imagined Viewpoints Modulate VisualSearch in Air Traffic Control DisplaysS2 – SAFETY POTPOURRI: PHYSICAL WORKCAPACITY;AVIATION SAFETYLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Bowie A (Level Two)SafetyChair: Dennis B. Beringer, Federal Aviation Admin.;Cochair: William Vigilante, Robson Forensic, Inc.1. Jia-Hua Lin, Raymond W. McGorry, <strong>and</strong> WayneMaynard, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. forSafety, One-H<strong>and</strong>ed Pull Strength Capacityfor the Male Population2. Michael A. Rodriguez, InfoPrint Solutions Co.,How Much Can a Person Really Lift? TailoringLifting Guidelines for Specific Tasks3. Kenneth Nemire, HFE Consulting, Usage<strong>Factors</strong> Affecting Backpack Use <strong>and</strong> PainReports in Adolescent Students4. Jeffrey B. Phillips, Rita G. Simmons, John P.Florian, Dain S. Horning, Renee A. Lojewski,<strong>and</strong> Joseph F. Ch<strong>and</strong>ler, U.S. Naval AerospaceMedical Research Lab, Moderate IntermittentHypoxia: Effect on Two-Choice Reaction TimeFollowed by a Significant Delay in Recovery5. Suzanne K. Kearns, U. of Western Ontario,e-CRM: The Advantages <strong>and</strong> Challengesof Computer-Based Pilot Safety TrainingSD3 – HUMAN FACTORS ACROSS BUSINESSSECTORS: SIMILARITIES AND DIFFERENCESDiscussion PanelThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Republic C (Level Four)System DevelopmentChair: Rebecca Grier, U.S. Naval Sea Systems Comm<strong>and</strong>Panelists: Gretchen Lizza, U.S. Naval Sea Systems Comm<strong>and</strong>;Aaron Bangor, AT&T Labs; Michael J. PattersonT3 – ADVANCING THE SCIENCE OF TRAININGIN SIMULATION-BASED TRAININGInvited SymposiumThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Republic A (Level Four)TrainingChair: Jennifer J. Vogel-Walcutt, U. of Central Florida1. Denise Nicholson, Stephen M. Fiore, Jennifer J.Vogel-Walcutt, <strong>and</strong> Sae Schatz, U. of CentralFlorida, Advancing the Science of Training inSimulation-Based Training2. Jennifer Fowlkes <strong>and</strong> Joseph W. Norman, CHISystems, Inc.; Sae Schatz, U. of Central Florida;Kevin C. Stagl, CHI Systems, Inc., ContrastingCases: A Strategy for Advanced LearningUsing Simulation-Based Training3. Jennifer J. Vogel-Walcutt, Stephen M. Fiore,Clint Bowers, <strong>and</strong> Denise Nicholson, U. ofCentral Florida, Embedding MetacognitivePrompts During SBT to Improve KnowledgeAcquisition4. Sae Schatz, Clint Bowers, <strong>and</strong> Denise Nicholson,U. of Central Florida, Advanced SituatedTutors: Design, Philosophy, <strong>and</strong> a Reviewof Existing Systems5. Glenn A. Martin, Sae Schatz, Clint Bowers, <strong>and</strong>Charles E. Hughes, U. of Central Florida; JenniferFowlkes, CHI Systems, Inc.; Denise Nicholson,U. of Central Florida, Automatic ScenarioGeneration Through Procedural Modelingfor Scenario-Based Training6. Timothy Kotnour, U. of Central Florida; KayStanney, Design Interactive; Rafael L<strong>and</strong>aeta,Old Dominion U.; Laura Milham, DesignInteractive; Julie Drexler <strong>and</strong> Denise Nicholson,U. of Central Florida, Developing ImpactAssessment for Training Systems Research &Development: A Case Study of the StrategicApproach for the NEWIT SystemMcNay Art Museum, San Antonio26 OCTOBER 22 – THURSDAY


Thursday, October 2210:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon5. Sangwon Lee, Pennsylvania State U.; Richard J.Koubek, Louisiana State U., CommunicativeNGOMSL: An Extension of NGOMSL toAnalyze a Text-Based Communication SystemAS3 – COGNITIVE FACTORS IN PILOTS ANDAIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLERSLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonRepublic A (Level Four)Aerospace SystemsChair: Roni Prinzo, Federal Aviation Admin.; Cochair:Esa Rantanen, Rochester Inst. of Technology1. Steven J. L<strong>and</strong>ry <strong>and</strong> Hyo-Sang Yoo, Purdue U.,Modeling Operator Responses to Alerts2. Michael W. Sawyer <strong>and</strong> Scott A. Shappell,Clemson U., Eye-Tracking Analysis of theEffects of Experience <strong>and</strong> Training on Pilots’Ability to Identify Adverse Weather Conditions3. Kelene Fercho <strong>and</strong> Douglas Peterson, U. of SouthDakota, The Effects of Geographic Familiarity<strong>and</strong> Map Complexity on Mental Rotation4. Shayne Loft, U. of Western Australia; Rebekah E.Smith, U. of Texas at San Antonio; AdellaBhaskara, U. of Queensl<strong>and</strong>, Designing MemoryAids to Facilitate Intentions to Deviate FromRoutine in an Air Traffic Control SimulationC1 – COMMUNICATIONS FROM NEARAND AFARLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonSeguin (Level Four)CommunicationChair: Mir<strong>and</strong>a Capra, <strong>Human</strong>Centric Inc.; Cochair:Aaron Bangor, AT&T Labs, Inc.1. Mark S. Pfaff, Indiana U. – Indianapolis,Emotional Conversations in Comm<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong>Control: The Impact of Mood <strong>and</strong> Stress onComputer-Mediated Team CommunicationBehaviors2. Thomas D. Fincannon, William Evans, ElizabethPhillips, Florian Jentsch, <strong>and</strong> Joseph R. Keebler,U. of Central Florida, The Influence of TeamSize <strong>and</strong> Communication Modality on TeamEffectiveness With Unmanned Systems3. James P. Beno, San Jose State U., Effects of TelepresenceLight Height <strong>and</strong> Ambient Light onGlare <strong>and</strong> Appearance4. Joshua B. Hurwitz, Motorola, The Effect ofMobile Advertising Presentation Parameterson Br<strong>and</strong> MemoryCE9 – CURRENT CONCEPTS AND TRENDS INHUMAN-AUTOMATION INTERACTIONDiscussion PanelThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonLone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Ernesto Bustamante, U. of Idaho; Cochair:Poornima Madhavan, Old Dominion U.Panelists: Christopher D. Wickens, Alion Science &Technology MA&D Operations; Raja Parasuraman,George Mason U.; Dietrich Manzey <strong>and</strong> J. ElinBahner-Heyne, Berlin Inst. of Technology; JoachimMeyer, Ben Gurion U. of the Negev; James P. Bliss,Old Dominion U.; John D. Lee, U. of Wisconsin –Madison; Stephen Rice, New Mexico State U.HC5 – USER-CREATED COGNITIVE ARTIFACTS:WHAT CAN THEY TEACH US ABOUT DESIGNOF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY?Discussion PanelThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonTravis A/B (Level Three)Health CareChair: Yan Xiao, U. of Maryl<strong>and</strong> – BaltimorePanelists: Rolin (Terry) J. Fairbanks, U. of Rochester;Ayse P. Gurses, Johns Hopkins U.; ChristopherNemeth, Klein Associates Division of AppliedResearch Associates; Emilie Roth, Roth CognitiveEngineering; Robert L. Wears, U. of Florida; PaulGorman, Oregon Health <strong>and</strong> Science U.ME5 – HUMAN FACTORS IN ORGANIZATIONALCOMPLEXITYInvited SymposiumThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonTravis C/D (Level Three)MacroergonomicsChair: Hal W. Hendrick, Hendrick & Assoc.1. Hal W. Hendrick, Hendrick & Assoc., <strong>Human</strong><strong>Factors</strong> in Organizational Complexity2. Hal W. Hendrick, Hendrick & Assoc., A SociotechnicalSystems Model of OrganizationalComplexity <strong>and</strong> Design <strong>and</strong> Its Relation toEmployee Cognitive ComplexityThursdayOct. 22OCTOBER 22 – THURSDAY 27


ThursdayOct. 223. Larry Browning, U. of Texas at Austin; G. H.Morris, California State U., San Marcos, Complexity,Communication, <strong>and</strong> Design4. Hal W. Hendrick, Hendrick & Assoc.; NajmedinMeshkati, U. of Southern California, A LessonFrom Complex Systems’ Successes <strong>and</strong>Failures5. Nancy Larson, 3M Corp., <strong>Ergonomics</strong> <strong>Program</strong>s:A Case Study in ComplexityPD4 – DECONSTRUCTING PRODUCT DESIGN:VARIOUS APPROACHESLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonBowie B (Level Two)Product DesignChair: Tonya L. Smith-Jackson, Virginia Tech; Cochair:Kristi Bauerly, Apple, Inc.1. Christopher A. Miller, Peggy Wu, Eric Engstrom,Jeff Rye, <strong>and</strong> Kimberly Ferguson-Walter, SmartInformation Flow Technologies; Debra Schreckenghost,TRACLabs, Inc., A Multi-Model Aid forInterface Design (MAID): Helping DesignersReason About Information Match2. Stanley Caplan, Usability Associates, User-Centered Generation of New Product Concepts:A Case Study of <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> <strong>and</strong>Industrial Design Collaboration3. Liang Zeng, Robert W. Proctor, <strong>and</strong> GavrielSalvendy, Purdue U., Integrating Creativity inIT Product <strong>and</strong> Service Development IntoErgonomic Design Practices4. Wonsup Lee, Kihyo Jung, Jangwoon Park, SujinKim, Sunghye Yoon, Moonsung Kim, <strong>and</strong>Heecheon You, POSTECH, Development of aQuantitative <strong>and</strong> Comprehensive UsabilityEvaluation System Based on User NeedsS3 – MANAGING SAFETY:ACCIDENT TRENDS,RELIABILITY, & RESILIENCELectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonBowie A (Level Two)SafetyChair: Chrisopher Mayhorn, North Carolina State U.;Cochair: Jay Pollack, Crown Equipment Corp.1. Katherine A. Berry, Paris F. Stringfellow, <strong>and</strong>Scott A. Shappell, Clemson U., ConsideringTrends Among Industrial Accidents: A PreliminaryMeta-Analysis of HFACS Causal<strong>Factors</strong> Across Industries2. Michael Hildebr<strong>and</strong>t, OECD Halden ReactorProject; Johanna Oxstr<strong>and</strong>, Ringhals AB; RonaldLaurids Boring, S<strong>and</strong>ia National Labs, LivingHRA: Building New Communities of Practicefor Proactive Safety Management3. Ronald Laurids Boring, S<strong>and</strong>ia National Labs;Johanna Oxstr<strong>and</strong>, Vattenfall Ringhals AB; MichaelHildebr<strong>and</strong>t, OECD Halden Reactor Project,<strong>Human</strong> Reliability Analysis for ControlRoom Upgrades4. Ronald Laurids Boring, S<strong>and</strong>ia National Labs,Reconciling Resilience With Reliability:The Complementary Nature of ResilienceEngineering <strong>and</strong> <strong>Human</strong> Reliability AnalysisSF4 – STUDENT RESEARCH POTPOURRI OFDISPLAYS,AGING,AND COGNITIONLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonRepublic B (Level Four)Student ForumChair: Thomas Ferris, U. of Michigan; Cochair:Jennifer Cowley, North Carolina State U.1. Jeremy Mendel <strong>and</strong> Richard Pak, Clemson U.,The Effect of Interface Consistency <strong>and</strong>Cognitive Load on User Performance in anInformation Search Task2. Mary G. Luong <strong>and</strong> Anne Collins McLaughlin,North Carolina State U., Bar Graphs <strong>and</strong> SmallScreens: Mitigating Cognitive Load in MobileVisualizations3. Shameem Hameed <strong>and</strong> Nadine Sarter, U. ofMichigan, Context-Sensitive InformationPresentation: Integrating Adaptive <strong>and</strong>Adaptable Approaches to Display Design4. Christopher M. Kelley <strong>and</strong> Anne CollinsMcLaughlin, North Carolina State U., FeedbackRequirements for Learning in Younger <strong>and</strong>Older Adults: The Role of CognitiveResources <strong>and</strong> Task Dem<strong>and</strong>5. Katherine E. Olson, Arthur D. Fisk, <strong>and</strong> WendyA. Rogers, Georgia Tech, Collaborative AutomatedSystems: Older Adults’ Mental ModelAcquisition <strong>and</strong> Trust in AutomationST3 – HMI & ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE/SYSTEMLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonLone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)Surface TransportationChair: Susan Chrysler, Texas Transportation Inst.;Cochair: Laura Higgins, Texas Transportation Inst.1. Phillip Tretten, Industrial Design; Carl JörgenNormark <strong>and</strong> Anita Gärling, <strong>Human</strong> WorkSciences, Where Should Driver InformationBe Placed? A Study on Display Layout2. Shelby Thompson <strong>and</strong> Harry Litaker, LockheedMartin; Robert Howard, NASA, DeterminingWindow Placement <strong>and</strong> Configuration for theSmall Pressurized Rover (SPR)28 OCTOBER 22 – THURSDAY


3. David R. Hunter, Artis, LLC; Christopher A.Monk, George Mason U.; Elisa Hurwitz, Artis,LLC, Effects of a Motion-Coupled VisualDisplay on Motion Sickness <strong>and</strong> TaskPerformance4. Kurt Ising, MEA Forensic; Marc Green, VisualExpert, The Distribution of Visibility Levelsat Target Detection in a Modified Adrian/CIEVisibility Model5. Jason A. Droll, Tate Kubose, Su-Wei Huang,Doris Trachtman Aharoni, <strong>and</strong> Douglas Young,Exponent, An Analysis of Low-Speed PedestrianCrashes Involving Electric-Powered <strong>and</strong>Combustion-Powered VehiclesThursday, October 221:30 to 3:00 p.m.CE10 – ANALYZING COGNITIVE WORK:METHODS AND EX<strong>AM</strong>PLESLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Dapeng Cao, U. of New York, SUNY1. David Close, Kari Babski-Reeves, Nick Younan,<strong>and</strong> Noel Schultz, Mississippi State U., CognitiveTask Analysis of Power Grid Monitors2. Jan Maarten Schraagen <strong>and</strong> Josine van de Ven,TNO Defence; Robert R. Hoffman, Inst. for<strong>Human</strong> <strong>and</strong> Machine Cognition; Brian M. Moon,Perigean Technologies, Inc., Using a KnowledgeElicitation Method to Specify the BusinessModel of a <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> Organization3. Catherine M. Burns, U. of Waterloo; GerardTorenvliet, Esterline|CMC Electronics; BruceChalmers, Defence Research & DevelopmentCanada – Atlantic; Stacey D. Scott, U. of Waterloo,Work Domain Analysis for Establishing CollaborativeWork Requirements4. Neesha Kodagoda, B. L. William Wong, <strong>and</strong>Nawaz Khan, Middlesex U., Cognitive TaskAnalysis of Low <strong>and</strong> High Literacy Users:Experiences in Using Grounded Theory <strong>and</strong>Emergent Themes Analysis5. Robert R. Hoffman <strong>and</strong> Morris Marx, Inst. for<strong>Human</strong> <strong>and</strong> Machine Cognition; Patricia L.McDermott, Alion Science & Technology: MA&DOperations; Raid Amin, U. of West Florida, TheMetrics Problem in the Study of CognitiveWork <strong>and</strong> a Proposal for a Family of SolutionsED2 – ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN:AGING &DISABILITY CONSIDERATIONSLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Travis C/D (Level Three)Environmental DesignChair: Paul Allie, Koala LLC; Cochair: Alan Hedge,Cornell U.1. Alison G. Vredenburgh <strong>and</strong> Ilene B. Zackowitz,Vredenburgh <strong>and</strong> Associates, Inc., EvaluatingCommon Approaches Used to AccommodatePeople With Disabilities Residing in ExistingMulti-Family Housing2. Lubomir Popov, Bowling Green State U.,A Conceptual Framework for Guiding DataCollection in Facilities <strong>Program</strong>ming3. Abir Mullick, Rachna Khare, Sarah A. Endicott,<strong>and</strong> Marisa Topping, Georgia Tech, DesigningInclusive Educational Spaces With Referenceto Autism4. Cara Bailey Fausset, Georgia Tech; Andrew K.Mayer, U. of Calgary; Wendy A. Rogers <strong>and</strong>Arthur D. Fisk, Georgia Tech, Underst<strong>and</strong>ingAging in Place for Older Adults: A NeedsAnalysisFP3 – APPLICATIONS OF EMPIRICALRESEARCH TO FORENSICS PRACTICELectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Bowie A (Level Two)Forensics ProfessionalChair: Tonya L. Smith-Jackson, Virginia Tech1. Jason A. Young <strong>and</strong> Gabriel Reina, Giffin KoerthForensic Engineering, Visibility of TractorTrailer Reflective Strips at Small ViewingAngles in Collision Reconstruction2. Daniel A. Johnson, Daniel A. Johnson, Inc.,Improper Construction Results in DangerousStairs: Large Top Runs Produce Fall Hazard3. Joseph Cohen & H. Harvey Cohen, ErrorAnalysis, Inc., “Spontaneous Combustion” ofOil-Based Wood-Finishing Products: Hiddenor Obvious Hazard?ThursdayOct. 22OCTOBER 22 – THURSDAY 29


ThursdayOct. 22GS6 – GENERAL SESSIONS POTPOURRI IILectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Bowie C (Level Two)General SessionsChair: Erik Connors, SA Technologies, Inc.; Cochair:Linda Ellis, SA Technologies, Inc.1. Karen N. Cooper <strong>and</strong> Naira H. Campbell-Kyureghyan, U. of Louisville; Carolyn M.Sommerich, Ohio State U., Comparative Studyof Computer Usage Patterns <strong>and</strong> Prevalenceof Musculoskeletal Symptoms Among CollegeStudents2. Hyeg-Joo Choi, Oak Ridge Inst. for Science <strong>and</strong>Education; Gregory F. Zehner, Wright-PattersonAir Force Base; Jeffrey A. Hudson, InfoSciTex;Scott M. Fleming, Wright-Patterson Air ForceBase, Trends in Anthropometric Measures inU.S. Air Force Aircrew Survey Data3. Meike Jipp, Christian Bartolein, <strong>and</strong> EssameddinBadreddin, U. of Heidelberg, QuantitativeComparison of a Joystick <strong>and</strong> a Two-SwitchControl Mode When Steering a WheelchairThrough a Realistic Environment4. Kageyu Noro, Waseda U.; Takayuki Sasaki <strong>and</strong>Daisuke Kaku, Asahi Glass Co., Ltd., MattressDevelopment Through a Participatory <strong>Ergonomics</strong>ApproachHC6 – ROLE OF HUMAN FACTORS INPATIENT-CENTERED CARELectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Travis A/B (Level Three)Health CareChair: S<strong>and</strong>ra Garrett, Clemson U.1. Molly Follette Story, <strong>Human</strong> Spectrum Design,LLC; Adam C. Luce, Boston U.; David M.Rempel, U. of California, Berkeley, Accessibility<strong>and</strong> Usability of Diabetes ManagementDevices for Users With Vision Disabilities2. Kirsten A. Peters, Thomas F. Green, <strong>and</strong> Robert M.Schumacher, User Centric, Inc., Improving theUser Interface <strong>and</strong> Adoption of Online PersonalHealth Records3. Stephen E. Douglas <strong>and</strong> Barrett S. Caldwell,Purdue U., Improving Communication ofHealth Status Information4. Jackie Binnersley, Andree Woodcock, <strong>and</strong> LouiseWallace, Coventry U.; Panayiotis Kyriacou, CityU., Establishing User Requirements for aPatient-Held Electronic Record System inthe United Kingdom5. Tracy L. Mitzner, Jenay M. Beer, Sara E. McBride,Wendy A. Rogers, <strong>and</strong> Arthur D. Fisk, GeorgiaTech, Older Adults’ Needs for Home HealthCare <strong>and</strong> the Potential for <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>InterventionsHP4 – TOWARD INTEGRATIVE MODELSOF COGNITIVE, MOTOR,AND VISUALPERFORMANCELectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Seguin (Level Four)<strong>Human</strong> Performance ModelingChair: Erin Alves, Raytheon Integrated DefenseSystems; Cochair: Steven L<strong>and</strong>ry, Purdue U.1. Bonnie E. John, Carnegie Mellon U.; MarilynHughes Blackmon, Peter G. Polson, <strong>and</strong> KarlFennell, U. of Colorado; Leonghwee Teo,Carnegie Mellon U., Rapid Theory Prototyping:An Example of an Aviation Task2. Dario D. Salvucci, Drexel U.; Christopher A.Monk, George Mason U.; J. Gregory Trafton, U.S.Naval Research Lab, A Process-Model Accountof Task Interruption <strong>and</strong> Resumption: WhenDoes Encoding of the Problem State Occur?3. Ron Stevens <strong>and</strong> Trysha Galloway, U. ofCalifornia, Los Angeles; Chris Berka, AdvancedBrain Monitoring, Inc.; Marcia Sprang, EsperanzaHigh School, Neurophysiologic CollaborationPatterns During Team Problem Solving4. Satoru Tokuda, Evan M. Palmer, Edgar Merkle,<strong>and</strong> Alex Chaparro, Wichita State U., Using SaccadicIntrusions to Quantify Mental Workload5. Elizabeth K. Bowman <strong>and</strong> Jeffrey A. Smith, U.S.Army Research Lab, An Analysis Capabilityfor System of Systems ResearchIE3 – UPPER EXTREMITIESLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)Industrial <strong>Ergonomics</strong>Chair: Kermit Davis, U. of Cincinnati; Cochair: RileySplittstoesser, Ohio State U.1. Vincent M. Ciriello, Rammohan V. Maikala,Patrick G. Dempsey, <strong>and</strong> Niall V. O’Brien, LibertyMutual Research Inst. for Safety, Cart-PushingCapabilities for Males <strong>and</strong> Females: AnUpdate2. Kyle A. Saginus, Richard W. Marklin, <strong>and</strong> Philip A.Voglewede, Marquette U., Dynamic Modelingof H<strong>and</strong> Push Force to Close a DisconnectSwitch at Switching Stations <strong>and</strong> Substations30 OCTOBER 22 – THURSDAY


3. Christopher Blackledge, Daniel Carruth, KariBabski-Reeves, <strong>and</strong> David Close, MississippiState U.; Marianne Wilhelm, Lawrence TechnologicalU., Effects of Body Armor Design onUpper-Body Range of Motion4. David Close, Kari Babski-Reeves, Daniel Carruth,<strong>and</strong> Christopher Blackledge, Mississippi State U.;Marianne Wilhelm, Lawrence Technological U.,Assessment of Body Armor Design Impactson User Perceptions5. David L. Lee, U. of California, San Francisco;Jack T. Dennerlein, Harvard U.; Nancy A. Baker,U. of Pittsburgh, Interrater Reliability of theMouse-Personal Computer Style Instrument(M-PeCS)POS3 – POSTERS 3Poster SessionThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom Corridor (Level Two)Chair: Jessica M. Ray, U. of Central Florida; Cochair:Robin A. N. Littlejohn, Mississippi State U.Poster sessions are 90 minutes only; presenters arerequired to be present throughout the session.<strong>Human</strong>-Robot Interaction1. Matthew S. Prewett, Kristin N. Saboe, Ryan C.Johnson, <strong>and</strong> Michael D. Coovert, U. of SouthFlorida; Linda R. Elliott, U.S. Army ResearchLab, Workload in <strong>Human</strong>-Robot Interaction:A Review of Manipulations <strong>and</strong> Outcomes2. Ryan C. Johnson, Kristin N. Saboe, Matthew S.Prewett, <strong>and</strong> Michael D. Coovert, U. of SouthFlorida; Linda R. Elliott, U.S. Army ResearchLab, Autonomy <strong>and</strong> Automation Reliabilityin <strong>Human</strong>-Robot Interaction: A QualitativeReview3. Julian Sanchez, MITRE Corp., ConceptualModel of <strong>Human</strong>-Automation Interaction4. Deborah R. Billings, U. of Central Florida; Paula J.Durlach, U.S. Army Research Inst., Mission CompletionTime Is Sensitive to Teleoperation PerformanceDuring Simulated ReconnaissanceMissions With a Micro-Unmanned AerialVehicle5. Rosemarie Yagoda, North Carolina State U.;Michael D. Coovert, U. of South Florida, Modeling<strong>Human</strong>-Robot Interaction With Petri-Nets6. Valerie K. Sims, Matthew G. Chin, <strong>and</strong> Heather C.Lum, U. of Central Florida; Linda Upham Ellis,SA Technologies, Inc.; Tatiana Ballion <strong>and</strong>Nicholas C. Lagattuta, U. of Central Florida,Robots’ Auditory Cues Are Subject toAnthropomorphism7. Anne M. Sinatra, Matthew G. Chin, Valerie K.Sims, Heather C. Lum, Nicholas C. Lagattuta,Mark Spitzer, Catherine Mobley, <strong>and</strong> MatthewMarraffino, U. of Central Florida, Free-FormVerbal Communication Toward RoboticEntities Versus Live Entities8. Scott Ososky, A. William Evans III, <strong>and</strong> FlorianJentsch, U. of Central Florida, From the Labto the Field: Observations From UnmannedSystem Field Research <strong>and</strong> Comparisons toLaboratory Counterparts9. Richard T. Stone, Iowa State U.; Ann M. Bisantz,James Llinas, <strong>and</strong> Victor Paquet, U. at Buffalo,SUNY, Improving Telerobotic NavigationThrough Augmented Reality Devices10. Lindsay O. Long, Joshua A. Gomer, Kristin S.Moore, <strong>and</strong> Christopher C. Pagano, Clemson U.,Investigating the Relationship Between VisualSpatial Abilities <strong>and</strong> Robot Operation DuringDirect Line of Sight <strong>and</strong> Teleoperation11. Harry Litaker <strong>and</strong> Shelby Thompson, LockheedMartin; Robert Howard, NASA, A Comparison ofthe Unpressurized Rover <strong>and</strong> Small PressurizedRover During a Desert Field Evaluation<strong>Human</strong>-Computer Interaction12. Peiyi Ko, David Li, Pia Hoenig, Ian Bailey, <strong>and</strong>David M. Rempel, U. of California, Berkeley,Effect of Computer Monitor Distance onVisual Symptoms <strong>and</strong> Changes in Accommodation<strong>and</strong> Binocular Vision13. Chris Powell, S. Camille Peres, Vickie Nguyen,Kate E. Bruton, <strong>and</strong> Lindsey Muse, U. ofHouston – Clear Lake, Using the Keyboard toIssue Comm<strong>and</strong>s: The Relation of ObservingOthers Using Efficient Techniques on theWeightings of the Costs <strong>and</strong> Benefits14. Rochelle E. Evans <strong>and</strong> Philip Kortum, Rice U.,Voice Personalities Inducing Trust <strong>and</strong>Satisfaction in a Medical Interactive VoiceResponse System15. Andy Su <strong>and</strong> Philip Kortum, Rice U., EthnographicStudy of On-Hold Caller MultitaskingBehavior16. Muhammet S. Gulum <strong>and</strong> Susan L. Murray,Missouri U. of Science & Technology, Evaluationof the Effectiveness of a Mass EmergencyNotification SystemUniversity Lab PostersAuburn U.Biomechanics Lab <strong>and</strong> <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> LabArizona State U.<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> LabsCalifornia State U., Long BeachCenter for the Study of Advanced AeronauticTechnologiesCenter for Usability in Design <strong>and</strong> AccessibilityThursdayOct. 22OCTOBER 22 – THURSDAY 31


ThursdayOct. 22Central Michigan U.Engineering Psychophysiology Lab <strong>and</strong> DrivingEvaluation Education Research CenterClemson U.Psychology LabsGeorge Mason U.<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Ergonomics</strong> LabMassachusetts Inst. of Technology<strong>Human</strong>s <strong>and</strong> Automation LabMississippi State U.<strong>Human</strong> Systems Engineering LabMissouri Western State U.Psychology of Design LabNorth Carolina State U.Industrial <strong>and</strong> Systems Engineering <strong>Ergonomics</strong>LabOhio U.<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Ergonomics</strong> LabOld Dominion U.Applied Sensory Psychology LabPennsylvania State U.Ben Neibel Work Design LabRochester Inst. of TechnologyMultidisciplinary Vision Research Lab, Lab forComputer-<strong>Human</strong> Interaction <strong>and</strong> PerformanceSupport, <strong>and</strong> <strong>Human</strong> Performance LabU. of Central FloridaTeam Performance LabU. of MichiganCenter for <strong>Ergonomics</strong>U. of Virginia<strong>Human</strong>-Automation Interaction Lab, <strong>Human</strong>Performance Modeling Lab, <strong>and</strong> TactileModeling <strong>and</strong> Simulation LabPP4 – PERCEIVING AND PERFORMING VIAINTERFACESLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Republic B (Level Four)Perception & PerformanceChair: Harvey S. Smallman, Pacific Science & EngineeringGroup; Cochair: Allyson Hall, Texas Tech U.1. T. Robert Turner <strong>and</strong> Mark W. Scerbo, Old DominionU.; Dwight Meglan <strong>and</strong> Robert Waddington,SimQuest, LLC, Evaluating Visual <strong>and</strong> HapticFeedback on a Virtual Reality Simulator forOrthopedic Bone Pinning2. Brittany L. Anderson, Mark W. Scerbo, <strong>and</strong> Lee A.Belfore, Old Dominion U.; Alfred Z. Abuhamad,Eastern Virginia Medical School, DetectingCritical Patterns in Maternal–Fetal HeartRate Tracings Over Time3. Douglas J. Gillan, North Carolina State U.,Judging the Lengths of Curved Lines4. Morgan J. Tear, William J. Harrison, Matthew B.Thompson, <strong>and</strong> Penelope M. S<strong>and</strong>erson, U. ofQueensl<strong>and</strong>, Head-Mounted Displays <strong>and</strong>Multisensory Integration: Replications <strong>and</strong>Challenges5. Alex<strong>and</strong>er M. Morison, David D. Woods, <strong>and</strong>James W. Davis, Ohio State U., How PanoramicVisualization Can Support <strong>Human</strong> Supervisionof Intelligent SurveillanceTE2 – TEST & EVALUATION POTPOURRILectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Bowie B (Level Two)Test & EvaluationChair: James Pharmer, NAVAIR; Cochair: ChristopherArbak, Boeing Co.1. Alvah C. Bittner, Bittner & Associates; Rachel C. L.Bittner, Seattle Children’s Research Inst., “Right-Sizing” Research Studies: Assuring Adequate,Not Grossly Overlarge Sample Sizes2. Pamela A. Savage-Knepshield, U.S. Army ResearchLab–HRED, Usability Testing: Making It Workfor the Army3. Sam O. Nagashima, Gregory K. W. K. Chung, <strong>and</strong>Paul D. Espinosa, CRESST/U. of California, LosAngeles; Chris Berka, Advanced Brain Monitoring,Inc., Validity Evidence for a Model of RifleMarksmanship Skill Performance UsingSensor-Based Measures4. Yoon Suk Lee, Tonya L. Smith-Jackson, <strong>and</strong>Maury A. Nussbaum, Virginia Tech, MultidimensionalTraining System Evaluation Using theRevised Bloom’s Taxonomy5. Jennifer A. Cowley <strong>and</strong> Heather Youngblood,North Carolina State U., Subjective ResponseDifferences Between Visual Analogue,Ordinal, <strong>and</strong> Hybrid Response ScalesVE2 – METHODOLOGIES AND INTERACTIONTECHNIQUES IN VIRTUAL REALITYLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.Republic A (Level Four)Virtual Environments1. F. Jacob Seagull, Peter Miller, <strong>and</strong> Ivan George,U. of Maryl<strong>and</strong>; Paul Mlyniec, Digital ArtForms;Adrian Park, U. of Maryl<strong>and</strong>, Interacting in3-D Space: Comparison of a 3-D Two-H<strong>and</strong>edInterface to a Keyboard-<strong>and</strong>-Mouse Interfacefor Medical 3-D Image Manipulation2. Roger J. Chapman, Collaborative Work Systems,Inc.; Dawn L. Riddle, Organizational SystemsDesign, Inc.; James L. Merlo, U.S. Military Academy,Techniques for Supporting the Authorof Outdoor Mobile Multimodal AugmentedReality32 OCTOBER 22 – THURSDAY


3. Grant Taylor, U. of Central Florida; Michael J.Singer, U.S. Army Research Inst. for the Behavioral& Social Sciences; Christian J. Jerome, StrategicAnalysts, Inc., Development <strong>and</strong> Evaluationof the Game-Based Performance AssessmentBattery (GamePAB) <strong>and</strong> Game ExperienceMeasure (GEM)4. Shelley Roberts, CAE PS Canada Inc.; Avi Parush,Carleton U., Roles of L<strong>and</strong>mark Size <strong>and</strong> Locationin Wayfinding <strong>and</strong> Spatial Cognition inVirtual Environments5. Magnus Axholt <strong>and</strong> Stephen D. Peterson,Linköping U.; Stephen R. Ellis, NASA AmesResearch Center, Visual Alignment Accuracyin Head-Mounted Optical See-Through ARDisplays: Distribution of Head OrientationNoiseThursday, October 223:30 to 5:00 p.m.AS4 – IMPACT OF DISPLAYS ON PERFORMANCEIN DIVERSE AEROSPACE DOMAINSLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Republic A (Level Four)Aerospace SystemsChair: Dennis B. Beringer, Federal Aviation Admin.;Cochair: John Ruffner, Serco, Inc.1. Kevin M. Long <strong>and</strong> Kathleen A. McGarry,MITRE/CAASD, Why Are Those LightsFlashing? Direct-to-Pilot Warnings forPreventing Runway Incursions2. Sean L. Guarino, Charles River Analytics, Inc.;Dahai Liu, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; EmilieRoth, Roth Cognitive Engineering; Karen Harper,Charles River Analytics, Inc.; Dennis Vincenzi,U.S. Naval Air Warfare Center Training SystemsDivision, Adaptive Boundary Aids in ComplexAir Combat Scenarios3. Yaniv Minkov <strong>and</strong> Tal Oron-Gilad, Ben-Gurion U.of the Negev, Display Type Effects in MilitaryOperational Tasks Using UAV Video Images4. G. Robert Arrabito, Geoffrey Ho, Heidi Au,Jocelyn M. Keillor, Mark Rutley, Annie Lambert,<strong>and</strong> Ming Hou, Defence Research & DevelopmentCanada – Toronto, Proposed Techniquesfor Extending Ecological Interface Designto Tactile Displays: Using Tactile Cues toEnhance UAV Interface Design5. Keshav Chintamani, Alex Cao, R. Darin Ellis,Chin-An Tan, <strong>and</strong> Abhilash K. P<strong>and</strong>ya, WayneState U., Systematic Teleoperation With AugmentedReality Path Planned NavigationCues in Cluttered EnvironmentsCE11 – DESIGNING FOR HUMAN-AUTOMATIONINTERACTIONLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom D (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Erik Connors, SA Technologies, Inc.1. Dietrich Manzey, Juliane Reichenbach, <strong>and</strong> LindaOnnasch, Berlin U. of Technology, <strong>Human</strong> PerformanceConsequences of Automated DecisionAids in States of Fatigue2. Rachel R. Phillips <strong>and</strong> Poornima Madhavan, OldDominion U., Effects of Secondary TaskProcessing Code on <strong>Human</strong>-AutomationInteraction in a Cross-Modal ExperimentalParadigm3. R<strong>and</strong>all D. Spain <strong>and</strong> Poornima Madhavan, OldDominion U., The Role of Automation Etiquette<strong>and</strong> Pedigree in Trust <strong>and</strong> Dependence4. R<strong>and</strong>all D. Spain <strong>and</strong> James P. Bliss, Old DominionU., The Effects of Automation Expertise<strong>and</strong> System Confidence on Trust Behaviors5. Rylan M. Clark, Gordon G. Peyton, <strong>and</strong> Ernesto A.Bustamante, U. of Idaho, Differential Effects ofLikelihood Alarm Technology <strong>and</strong> FalseAlarm Versus Miss-Prone Automation onDecision MakingE1 – METHODS, PROJECTS,AND PEDAGOGYIN HUMAN FACTORS EDUCATIONLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Bowie C (Level Two)EducationChair: Nancy Stone, Missouri U. of Science <strong>and</strong>Technology; Cochair: Rebecca Boren, Arizona State U.1. Matthew Marshall, Elizabeth DeBartolo, <strong>and</strong>Daniel Phillips, Rochester Inst. of Technology,Incorporating <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> Into a CapstoneSenior Design <strong>Program</strong> to BenefitIndividuals With Disabilities2. Brian E. Tidball, R<strong>and</strong>all W. Gibb, Terence S.Andre, <strong>and</strong> Chad C. Tossell, U.S. Air Force Academy,Undergraduate <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> Curriculumat the United States Air Force Academy3. Jonathan M. Histon <strong>and</strong> Stacey D. Scott, U. ofWaterloo, Expert Panels as a Means of EngagingStudents in the Applications of <strong>Human</strong><strong>Factors</strong>ThursdayOct. 22OCTOBER 22 – THURSDAY 33


ThursdayOct. 224. Steven L. Johnson, U. of Arkansas, ManagingErgonomic Course Projects in OperationalFacilities So That Everyone Benefits5. Thomas J. Smith, U. of Minnesota, UsabilityAnalysis of Learning Environments – Needs<strong>and</strong> RealitiesED3 – ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN POTPOURRILectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Travis C/D (Level Three)Environmental DesignChair: Claudia Mont’Alvão, PUC – Rio; Cochair: KarenJacobs, Boston U.1. Scott Haynes, Carrie Bruce, <strong>and</strong> Jon Sanford,Georgia Tech, Model Integrating AssistiveTechnology Use <strong>and</strong> <strong>Human</strong> Performancefor People With Disabilities2. Justin B. Rousek, Sonja Koneczny, <strong>and</strong> M. SusanHallbeck, U. of Nebraska – Lincoln, SimulatedVisual Impairment to Detect Hospital WayfindingDifficulties3. Alan Hedge, Cornell U.; H. Ezzat Khalifa <strong>and</strong>J. Zhang, Syracuse U., On the Control of EnvironmentalConditions Using Personal VentilationSystems4. Kyeong-Ah Jeong, Robert W. Proctor, <strong>and</strong> GavrielSalvendy, Purdue U., A Survey of Smart HomeInterface Preferences for U.S. <strong>and</strong> KoreanUsersHC7 – HUMAN FACTORS IN SURGERY – IILectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Travis A/B (Level Three)Health CareChair: Michelle L. Rogers, Drexel U.1. Gyusung Lee, U. of Maryl<strong>and</strong>; Yassar Youssef,Sinai Hospital of Baltimore; C. Melody Carswell<strong>and</strong> Cindy Hui-Lio, U. of Kentucky; Ivan George<strong>and</strong> Adrian Park, U. of Maryl<strong>and</strong>, ErgonomicSafety of Surgical Techniques <strong>and</strong> St<strong>and</strong>ingPositions Associated with LaparoscopicCholecystectomy2. Avi Parush, Carleton U.; Kathryn Momtahan,Ottawa Hospital; Tara Foster-Hunt, ChelseaKramer, <strong>and</strong> Aren Hunter, Carleton U.; HowardNathan, U. of Ottawa Heart Inst., A CommunicationAnalysis Methodology for Developinga Cardiac Operating Room Team-OrientedDisplay3. D. Liu <strong>and</strong> Penelope M. S<strong>and</strong>erson, U. of Queensl<strong>and</strong>;S. A. Jenkins, Royal Adelaide Hospital;M. O. Watson, U. of Queensl<strong>and</strong>; W. J. Russell,Royal Adelaide Hospital, Patient Monitoring inAnesthesia With a Head-Mounted Display:Simulator Studies <strong>and</strong> a Clinical Trial4. Mi Zhou <strong>and</strong> Caroline G. L. Cao, Tufts U., VibrotactileFeedback Improves Laparoscopic PalpationSkillsI2 – INPUT AND OUTPUTLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Seguin (Level Four)Internet; cosponsored by Computer SystemsChair: Richard Henneman, Internet Security Systems;Cochair: Wayne Shebilske, Wright State U.1. Robert Pastel, Michigan Technological U., Investigatingthe Difficulty of One Degree of FreedomPositioning: Associating MovementPhases With Regions2. Curtis M. Humphrey <strong>and</strong> Julie A. Adams, V<strong>and</strong>erbiltU., General Visualization AbstractionAlgorithm for Geographic Map-Based DirectableInterfaces3. Jo Rain Jardina, S. Camille Peres, Vickie Nguyen,Ashitra Megasari, Katherine R. Griggs, RosalindaPinales, <strong>and</strong> April N. Amos, U. of Houston – ClearLake, Keyboard Shortcut Users: They AreFaster at More Than Just Typing4. Deborah C. Russell <strong>and</strong> Rex Bryan, Dell, Inc.,To Touch or Not to Touch: A Brief Guide forDesigning or Selecting Touch Screen Computers<strong>and</strong> Touch Software for Consumer Use5. Wayne Shebilske, Ganesh Alakke, <strong>and</strong> ShrutiNarakesari, Wright State U., University StudentsUsing a Screen Reader for Education TasksS4 – SAFETY & RISK COMMUNICATIONSLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Bowie A (Level Two)SafetyChair: Michael J. Kalsher, Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst.;Cochair: Alison Vredenburgh, Vredenburgh &Associates, Inc.1. Eric J. Boelhouwer, Adam K. Piper, <strong>and</strong> JerryDavis, Auburn U., The Use of Hazard <strong>and</strong> PrecautionarySymbols on GHS Safety DataSheets2. Daniel J. Shorr, Kyoto U.; Neta Ezer, Arthur D.Fisk, <strong>and</strong> Wendy A. Rogers, Georgia Tech, Comprehensionof Warning Symbols by Younger<strong>and</strong> Older Adults: Effects of Visual Degradation34 OCTOBER 22 – THURSDAY


3. Richard C. Goldsworthy, Academic Edge, Inc.;Christopher B. Mayhorn, North Carolina State U.,On Warning Symbols, Text, <strong>and</strong> “Getting ItRight”: The Iterative Refinement of aTeratogenic Pharmaceutical Label4. Christopher B. Mayhorn, North Carolina State U.;Richard C. Goldsworthy, Academic Edge, Inc.,Borrowing Prescription Medication: Implicationsfor Health Care Warnings <strong>and</strong> Communications5. Soyun Kim <strong>and</strong> Michael S. Wogalter, North CarolinaState U., Habituation, Dishabituation, <strong>and</strong>Recovery Effects in Visual WarningsSD4 – HUMAN FACTORS REQUIREMENTS:BEING INVOLVED IN THE FIRST STAGE OFSYSTEM DEVELOPMENTDiscussion PanelThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Republic C (Level Four)System DevelopmentChair: Rebecca Grier, U.S. Naval Sea Systems Comm<strong>and</strong>Panelists: Gretchen Lizza, U.S. Navy; MichaelLinegang, Federal Aviation Admin.; Philip Kortum,Rice U.SF5 – STUDENT RESEARCH IN PHYSICALERGONOMICSLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Republic B (Level Four)Student Forum; cosponsored by Industrial <strong>Ergonomics</strong>Chair: Elizabet Haro, Virginia Tech; Cochair: MatthewMiller, Clemson U.1. Ranjana Mehta, Sarrah Harrop, <strong>and</strong> Michael J.Agnew, Virginia Tech, Effects of Physical <strong>and</strong>Mental Dem<strong>and</strong>s on Muscle Activity of theUpper Extremity2. Heon-Jeong Kim <strong>and</strong> Bernard J. Martin, U. ofMichigan, Effects of Posture <strong>and</strong> Movement onVibration Transmissibility Affecting <strong>Human</strong>Reach Performance Under Vehicle Vibration3. Courtney Ann Haynes <strong>and</strong> Thurmon E. Lockhart,Virginia Tech, Effects of Exercise Training onSlip Severity in Adults with Mental Retardation4. Xiaoyue Zhang <strong>and</strong> Thurmon E. Lockhart, VirginiaTech, A Reliability Study of Three FunctionalMobility Assessment Tools in Fall Risk Evaluation5. Prakriti Parijat, Courtney Ann Haynes, <strong>and</strong>Thurmon E. Lockhart, Virginia Tech; Jon Antin,Virginia Tech Transportation Inst., Investigationof Biomechanical Characteristics of OlderAdults: Effects of Gender <strong>and</strong> Driving StatusST4 – WARNINGS & ADVANCED IN-VEHICLESYSTEMSLectureThursday, October 22, 20<strong>09</strong>, 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.Lone Star Ballroom E (Level Two)Surface TransportationChair: John D. Lee, U. of Wisconsin – Madison;Cochair: Jay Pollack, Crown Equipment Corp.1. Justin F. Morgan, Virginia Tech TransportationInst.; Peter A. Hancock <strong>and</strong> Timothy J. Smoker,U. of Central Florida, Cueing to ImpendingIncreases in Driving Task Dem<strong>and</strong>2. Muneo Kitajima <strong>and</strong> Motoyuki Akamatsu, NationalInst. of Advanced Industrial Science <strong>and</strong> Technology;Yasunori Maruyama, Kouichi Kuroda,Kazuhiko Katou, <strong>and</strong> Satoshi Kitazaki, NissanMotor Co., Ltd.; Yosuke Minowa, KazuyoshiInagaki, <strong>and</strong> Tadahiko Kajikawa, U’eyes Design,Inc., Information for Helping Drivers AchieveSafe <strong>and</strong> Enjoyable Driving: An On-RoadObservational Study3. David Alex<strong>and</strong>er Dickie <strong>and</strong> Linda Ng Boyle, U.of Iowa, Drivers’ Underst<strong>and</strong>ing of AdaptiveCruise Control Limitations4. Scott McIntyre, Clemson U., Capturing Attentionto Brake Lamps in a Single Fixation5. Nicola Fricke, Transportation Active Safety Inst.;Manfred Thuring, TU Berlin, ComplementaryAudiovisual Collision WarningsFriday, October 238:30 to 10:00 a.m.CE12 – DISPLAYS AND CONTROLS FOR RO-BOTS, NAVIGATION,AND PROCESS CONTROLLectureFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Lone Star Ballroom A (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Laura Millitello, U. of Dayton Research Inst.;Cochair: Priyadarshini Pennathur, U. at Buffalo, SUNY1. Felix Portnoy <strong>and</strong> Poornima Madhavan, OldDominion U., Using Persistence Display toIncrease Change Detection in Process ControlGraphical GaugesFridayOct. 23OCTOBER 23 – FRIDAY 35


FridayOct. 232. Daniel N. Cassenti, Troy D. Kelley, Jennifer C.Swoboda, <strong>and</strong> Debra J. Patton, U.S. ArmyResearch Lab, The Effects of CommunicationStyle on Robot Navigation Performance3. Huadong Wang, Michael Lewis, <strong>and</strong> Shih-HsiangChien, U. of Pittsburgh; Prasanna Velagapudi,Carnegie Mellon U., Scaling Effects for SynchronousVersus Asynchronous Video inMultirobot Search4. Douglas J. Gillan, North Carolina State U.,Effects of Depth Cues on Perceived Height:The General Form of Emmert’s Law5. Will Rodes, Leo Gugerty, Johnell Brooks, <strong>and</strong>Claudio Cantalupo, Clemson U., The Effects ofElectronic Map Displays <strong>and</strong> Spatial Abilityon Performance of Navigational TasksHC8 – HEALTH CARE POTPOURRILectureFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Seguin (Level Four)Health CareChair: Enid Montague, U. of Wisconsin – Madison1. Patricia R. DeLucia <strong>and</strong> Tammy E. Ott, TexasTech U.; Patrick A. Palmieri, Duke U., Interruptions<strong>and</strong> Cognitive Processes in Nursing:Review, Analysis, Recommendations2. Michael J. Vredenburgh, Carlsbad High School,Public Health: An Epidemiological Study toExplore the Relationship Between Literacy,Language, Aging, <strong>and</strong> Familiarity on Comprehensionof Health Information3. Monifa Vaughn-Cooke, Pennsylvania State U.,Development of an Integrated Model forPredicting Patient Compliance4. Heidi S. Kramer, Laverne A. Snow, Frank Drews,<strong>and</strong> Matthew Samore, U. of Utah, Structuringthe Puzzle: Protocol Use in DiseaseOutbreak Investigations5. T. Grundgeiger <strong>and</strong> Penelope M. S<strong>and</strong>erson, U.of Queensl<strong>and</strong>; H. G. MacDougall, U. of Sydney;B. Venkatesh, Princess Alex<strong>and</strong>ra <strong>and</strong> WesleyHospital, Distributed Prospective Memory:An Approach to Underst<strong>and</strong>ing How NursesRemember TasksIE4 – APPLICATIONS OF INDUSTRIALERGONOMICSLectureFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Lone Star Ballroom B (Level Two)Industrial <strong>Ergonomics</strong>Chair: M. Susan Hallbeck, U. of Nebraska – Lincoln;Cochair: Richard Marklin, Marquette U.1. Caroline Joseph, U. at Buffalo, SUNY; DanielImbeau, École Polytechnique de Montréal;Iuliana Nastasia, Institut de recherche Robert-Sauvé en santé et en sécurité du travail (IRSST),Impact of Externally <strong>and</strong> Internally DrivenModifications to a Workstation: A CaseStudy in the Fish-Processing Industry2. Di Liu, Carolyn M. Sommerich, Elizabeth B.-N.S<strong>and</strong>ers, <strong>and</strong> Steven A. Lavender, Ohio State U.,Application of a Participatory Methodologyfor Investigating Personal Fall Arrest System(PFAS) Usage in the Construction Industry3. Stephen Freier, Richard W. Marklin, <strong>and</strong> PaulaPapanek, Marquette U., Effect of InvertedV-Shaped Backrest of an Office Chair onVentilatory <strong>and</strong> Cardiovascular Efficiency4. David R. Burnett, Sai V. Yalla, <strong>and</strong> Naira H.Campbell-Kyureghyan, U. of Louisville, DoStabilizing Forearm Braces Affect Elbow<strong>and</strong> Spine Posture During Wheelbarrow-Pushing Tasks?5. Thomas J. Armstrong, J. Young, Charles B.Woolley, J. Ashton-Miller, <strong>and</strong> H. Kim, U. ofMichigan, Biomechanical Aspects of FixedLadder Climbing: Style, Ladder Tilt, <strong>and</strong>CarryingME6 – MACROERGONOMICS IN EDUCATION:ON YOUR MARK, SET, GO!Discussion PanelFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Republic A (Level Four)MacroergonomicsChair: Jeffery Watson, U. of Wisconsin – MadisonPanelists: Thomas J. Smith, U. of Minnesota; SaraKraemer, <strong>and</strong> Richard Halverson, U. of Wisconsin –Madison; Andrée Woodcock, Coventry School of Art<strong>and</strong> Design36 OCTOBER 23 – FRIDAY


PD5 – PRACTICAL TIPS FOR DESIGNING AUSABILITY EVALUATION ENVIRONMENT:WHAT EQUIPMENT AND SOFTWARE DOYOU REALLY NEED?Discussion PanelFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Bowie B (Level Two)Product DesignChair: Daniel W. Mauney, <strong>Human</strong>Centric; Cochair: JoyRivera, U. of Wisconsin – MadisonPanelists: Mir<strong>and</strong>a Capra, <strong>Human</strong>Centric; Terence S.Andre, TiER 1 Performance Solutions; Jeff Br<strong>and</strong>t,AT&T Labs; Ian Collingwood, Amberlight PartnersLtd; Joy Kempic, Whirlpool Corp.PP5 – PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCEPOTPOURRILectureFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Republic B (Level Four)Perception & PerformanceChair: An<strong>and</strong> Tharanathan, Honeywell ACS Labs;Cochair: Jane Barrow, George Mason U.1. Christopher A. Monk <strong>and</strong> Erik T. Nelson, GeorgeMason U., Undershoot Bias in Lead-VehicleMotion Extrapolation2. Jibo He, Ensar Becic, Yi-Ching Lee, <strong>and</strong> Jason S.McCarley, U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,Identifying Mind-W<strong>and</strong>ering Behind the Wheel3. J. Christopher Brill, Michigan Technological U.;Mustapha Mouloua, U. of Central Florida;Samantha D. Hendricks, Michigan TechnologicalU., Compensatory Strategies for Managingthe Workload Dem<strong>and</strong>s of a MultimodalReserve Capacity Task4. Bin Zheng, U. of British Columbia; Christine L.MacKenzie, Simon Fraser U., A Comparisonof <strong>Human</strong> Performance in Grasping VirtualObjects by H<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> With Tools of DifferentLength Ratios5. Shaheen Ahmed <strong>and</strong> Kari Babski-Reeves, MississippiState U., Analysis of Subjective BodyDiscomfort Ratings During Simulated ProlongedDriving Tasks: What Measures AreMost Effective?SF6 – STUDENT RESEARCH ON MEMORYAND ATTENTIONLectureFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Lone Star Ballroom C (Level Two)Student ForumChair: Kelly Caine, Georgia Tech; Cochair: KimGausepohl, Virginia Tech1. Aren C. Hunter <strong>and</strong> Avi Parush, Carleton U.,Using Eye Movements to Uncover ConflictDetection Strategies2. Laura A. Whitlock <strong>and</strong> Anne Collins McLaughlin,North Carolina State U., The Role of EffortfulAttention in Effective Spatial Training3. Pei-Hsiu Tan <strong>and</strong> Yi-Ching Lee, U. of Illinois atUrbana-Champaign, Effect of Perceptual <strong>and</strong>Cognitive Loads on Drivers’ Attention <strong>and</strong>Resistance to Distractors4. Shane Paul Otvos, Adrian Musters, <strong>and</strong> Frank A.Drews, U. of Utah, Strategies in WorkingMemory <strong>and</strong> Interrupted Task Performance5. Timothy J. Smoker, Carrie E. Murphy, <strong>and</strong>Alison K. Rockwell, U. of Central Florida,Comparing Memory for H<strong>and</strong>writing VersusTypingT4 – ENHANCING TRAINING EFFECTIVENESS:DELIVERY METHODS AND TRAINEE CHARAC-TERISTICSLectureFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 8:30 to 10:00 a.m.Bowie A (Level Two)TrainingChair: Benjamin Knott, Air Force Research Lab;Cochair: April Rose Panganiban, Air Force Research Lab1. Arash Salehi, Lesley Strawderman, YunchenHuang, Shaheen Ahmed, <strong>and</strong> Kari Babski-Reeves,Mississippi State U., Effectiveness of ThreeTraining Delivery Methods in a Voluntary<strong>Program</strong>2. Andrew R. Dattel, Texas Tech U.; Francis T.Durso, Georgia Tech; Raynald Bédard, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U., Procedural or ConceptualTraining: Which Is Better for TeachingNovice Pilots L<strong>and</strong>ings <strong>and</strong> Traffic Patterns?3. Dina Burkolter, Annette Kluge, Sinan German,<strong>and</strong> Britta Grauel, U. of Duisburg-Essen, WasteWater Treatment Simulation (WaTr Sim):Validation of a New Process Control SimulationTool for Experimental Training Research4. Paul O’Connor, U.S. Naval Postgraduate School;Doug Jones, Task Force Competency Development,The Crew Resource Management Attitudesof U.S. Naval AviatorsFridayOct. 23OCTOBER 23 – FRIDAY 37


FridayOct. 235. Patricia C. Brennan <strong>and</strong> Poornima Madhavan, OldDominion U.; Cleotilde Gonzalez, CarnegieMellon U.; Frank C. Lacson, Pacific Science &Engineering Group, The Impact of PerformanceIncentives During Training on Transferof LearningFriday, October 2310:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonAS5 – SYSTEM FACTORS IN AEROSPACEOPERATIONSLectureFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonRepublic B (Level Four)Aerospace SystemsChair: Barry P. Goettl, Lackl<strong>and</strong> Air Force Base;Cochair: Paul Havig, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base1. Christopher D. Wickens, Alion Science & Technology:MA&D Operations; Rebecca L. Hooey<strong>and</strong> Brian F. Gore, San Jose State U. Foundation/NASA Ames Research Center; Angelia Sebok <strong>and</strong>Corey Koenecke, Alion Science & Technology:MA&D Operations; Ellen Salud, San Jose StateU. Foundation/NASA Ames Research Center,Predicting Pilot Performance in Off-NominalConditions: A Meta-Analysis <strong>and</strong> ModelValidation2. Stephen Rice, David Keller, <strong>and</strong> Jamie Hughes,New Mexico State U., False Alerts in the ATCConflict Alert System: Is There a Cry WolfEffect?3. Anthony D. Andre, Interface Analysis Associates;Jimmy Krozel, Metron Aviation, <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>Issues in the Design of Super-DenseOperations Airspace4. Jeffrey D. Onken <strong>and</strong> Barrett S. Caldwell, PurdueU., Toward Information Coordination <strong>and</strong>Reduced Team Size in Space Flight MissionOperations5. Ronald Small, Christopher Plott, <strong>and</strong> Patricia L.McDermott, Alion Science & Technology: MA&DOperations; Hector Acosta, Robert Lindberg, <strong>and</strong>Kathi-Ann MacLeod, U.S. Air Force ResearchLab, The Use of Concept Maps to Support<strong>Human</strong>-System Integration Requirements:Highlighting the <strong>Human</strong> Touch PointsCE13 – COGNITIVE ENGINEERING FOR COM-PLEX ENVIRONMENTSLectureFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonLone Star Ballroom A (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Michael Lewis, U. of Pittsburgh; Cochair: FelixPortnoy, Old Dominion U.1. Yao Hu <strong>and</strong> David Mendonca, New Jersey Inst. ofTechnology, Divergent <strong>and</strong> Convergent Thinkingin Emergency Response Organizations2. Nathan Perry, U. of Western Sydney; MarkWiggins, Macquarie U.; Merilyn Childs, CharlesSturt U.; Gerard Fogarty, U. of Southern Queensl<strong>and</strong>,Reduced Processing Decision Supportfor Competent Firefighters3. Frank A. Drews, Adrian Musters, Laura Siebeneck,<strong>and</strong> Thomas Cova, U. of Utah, Decision Makingof Wildl<strong>and</strong> Fire Incident Comm<strong>and</strong>ers4. Varun Dutt <strong>and</strong> Cleotilde Gonzalez, CarnegieMellon U., <strong>Human</strong> “Mis”-Perceptions ofClimate Change5. Varun Adibhatla, Alice Shapiro, <strong>and</strong> Michael D.McNeese, Pennsylvania State U.; BimalBalakrishnan, U. of Missouri, Design <strong>and</strong> Developmentof a Transactive Memory System Prototypefor Geocollaborative Crisis ManagementCE14 – COGNITIVE FACTORS FOR COGNI-TIVE ENGINEERINGLectureFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonLone Star Ballroom B (Level Two)Cognitive Engineering & Decision MakingChair: Leo Gugerty, Clemson U.; Cochair: Daniel N.Cassenti, U.S. Army Research Lab1. Mark T. Jodlowski, S<strong>and</strong>storm Design; Gary L.Bradshaw, Mississippi State U., In Support ofa Comprehension-Based Model of DynamicEnvironments2. Nicole E. Werner, David M. Cades, Deborah A.Boehm-Davis, <strong>and</strong> Matthew S. Peterson, GeorgeMason U., Resuming After Interruption: Exploringthe Roles of Spatial <strong>and</strong> Goal Memory3. Jason Ralph, Wayne D. Gray, <strong>and</strong> Michael J.Schoelles, Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst., TheFunctional Resource Hypothesis as a Basisfor Underst<strong>and</strong>ing Cognitive Workload inImmediate Interactive Behavior4. Raj Ratwani, Malcolm McCurry, <strong>and</strong> Greg Trafton,U.S. Naval Research Lab, Validating a PredictiveModel of Postcompletion Errors38 OCTOBER 23 – FRIDAY


5. Alyssa Andrews, George Mason U.; Raj Ratwani<strong>and</strong> J. Gregory Trafton, U.S. Naval Research Lab,Recovering From Interruptions: Does AlertType Matter?HC9 – INTERRUPTIONS IN HEALTH CARESETTINGS: FRIEND OR FOE?Discussion PanelFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonSeguin (Level Four)Health CareChair: Douglas A. Wiegmann, U. of Wisconsin –MadisonPanelists: S<strong>and</strong>ra K. Garrett, Clemson U.; Joy Rivera,U. of Wisconsin; Sarah Henrickson Parker, AberdeenU.; Frank Drews, U. of UtahHP5 – HUMAN PERFORMANCE MODELINGPOTPOURRILectureFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonRepublic A (Level Four)<strong>Human</strong> Performance ModelingChair: Esa Rantanen, Rutgers Inst. of Technology;Cochair: Matthew Bolton, U. of Virginia1. Diane Kuhl Mitchell <strong>and</strong> Charneta Samms, U.S.Army Research Lab, Workload Warriors:Lessons Learned From a Decade of MentalWorkload Prediction Using <strong>Human</strong> PerformanceModeling2. Huiping Zhou, Makoto Itoh, <strong>and</strong> ToshiyukiInagaki, U. of Tsukuba, Effects of CognitiveDistraction on Checking Traffic Conditionsfor Changing Lanes3. Douglas J. Gillan, North Carolina State U.,A Componential Model of <strong>Human</strong> Interactionwith Graphs: VII. A Review of theMixed Arithmetic-Perceptual Model4. Shin-Yuan Yu <strong>and</strong> Bernard J. Martin, U. ofMichigan, Movement Control Phases of Upper-Body Coordination in Visually Guided ReachMovements5. Farzan Sasangohar, U. of Waterloo; I. ScottMacKenzie, York U.; Stacey D. Scott, U. ofWaterloo, Evaluation of Mouse <strong>and</strong> TouchInput for a Tabletop Display Using Fitts’Reciprocal Tapping TaskPD6 – IMPROVING PRODUCT DESIGNTHROUGH EMOTIONS & OBSERVATIONSLectureFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonBowie B (Level Two)Product DesignChair: Joy Kempic, Whirlpool Corp.; Cochair: Keena S.Byrd, Intel Corp.1. Jeffrey J. Smith, Daniel P. Kelaher, <strong>and</strong> David T.Windell, IBM Corp., Gathering User FeedbackFrom Internal Sources to Supplement FormalUsability Studies2. Sarah A. Endicott, Gourab Kar, <strong>and</strong> Abir Mullick,Georgia Tech, Inclusive Indoor Play: Childrenat Play3. Marisa Topping, Wooyoung Sung, <strong>and</strong> AbirMullick, Georgia Tech, Inclusive Indoor Play –Using Children’s Drawings <strong>and</strong> Narratives toGain an Underst<strong>and</strong>ing of Children’s IndoorPlay Preferences4. Abir Mullick <strong>and</strong> R. L. Grubbs, Georgia Tech,Inclusive Indoor Play: Play <strong>and</strong> Playthings5. Danielle Lottridge <strong>and</strong> Mark Chignell, U. ofToronto, Emotrace: Tracing Emotions through<strong>Human</strong>-System InteractionS5 – CONSTRUCTION AND MINING SAFETYLectureFriday, October 23, 20<strong>09</strong> 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noonBowie A (Level Two)SafetyChair: Jia-Hua Lin, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. forSafety; Cochair: Ronald Laurids Boring, S<strong>and</strong>ia NationalLabs1. John G. Casali <strong>and</strong> Khaled Alali, Virginia Tech,Vehicle Backup Alarm Localization (or Not):Effects of Passive <strong>and</strong> Electronic HearingProtectors, Ambient Noise Level, <strong>and</strong> BackupAlarm Spectral Content2. J. R. Bartels, C. C. Jobes, J. P. Ducarme, <strong>and</strong> T. J.Lutz, NIOSH, Evaluation of Work PositionsUsed by Continuous Miner Operators inUnderground Coal Mines3. Angela DiDomenico <strong>and</strong> Raymond W. McGorry,Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for Safety, Perceptionsof Stability Upon St<strong>and</strong>ing FromWorking Postures Used in the ConstructionIndustry4. Yu-Hsiu Hung, Woodrow W. Winchester,Tonya L. Smith-Jackson, Thomas Mills, <strong>and</strong>Brian M. Kleiner, Virginia Tech; Kari Babski-Reeves, Mississippi State U., Fall ProtectionTraining: Needs Analysis for Small ResidentialRoofing SubcontractorsFridayOct. 23OCTOBER 23 – FRIDAY 39


ParticipantIndexPARTICIPANT INDEXAbuhamad, Alfred Z., 32Acosta, Hector, 38Adams, Julie A., 11, 14, 34Adibhatla, Varun, 25, 38Agnew, Michael J., 35Aharoni, Doris Trachtman, 29Ahmed, Shaheen, 37Ahram, Tareq, 18Ainsworth, Les, 10Akamatsu, Motoyuki, 35Alakke, Ganesh, 34Alali, Khaled, 39Albert, William, 11Alberti, Pascal, 20Alex<strong>and</strong>er, Amy L., 17Alfred, Petra, 25Allan, Karla Eve, 13, 20Allie, Paul, 22, 29Allread, W. Gary, 9Almadas, Jindrich, 11Alvarado, Carla J., 12, 25Alves, Erin, 30Amalberti, Rene, 12Amamou, Nassera, 12Amin, Raid, 29Amos, April N., 34Anders, Shilo, 15, 18Anderson, Brittany L., 32Anderson, Gretchen, 17, 25Andre, Anthony D., 15, 38Andre, Jeffrey, 19Andre, Terence S., 33, 36Andrews, Alyssa, 39Ansong, Elizabeth, 22Antin, Jon, 35Arbak, Christopher, 32Arbuckle, Nicole, 10Armstrong, Thomas J., 12, 36Arndt, Steven, 9Arrabito, G. Robert, 33Ashton-Miller, J., 36Au, Heidi, 33Auroy, Yves, 12Axholt, Magnus, 33Babski-Reeves, Kari, 29, 31, 37,39Bader, Julia, 12Badreddin, Essameddin, 18, 30Bahner-Heyne, J. Elin, 18, 27Bahr, Gisela Susanne, 13Bailey, Ian, 31Baker, Amir, 22Baker, Nancy A., 31Balakrishnan, Bimal, 25, 38Baldwin, Carryl L., 19, 23, 24Ballion, Tatiana, 31Bangor, Aaron, 26, 27Barnes, Michael, 9Barnett, John, S., 10Barrow, Jane H., 20, 23, 37Bartels, J. R., 39Bartha, Michael C., 22Bartolein, Christian, 30Bass, Ellen, J., 22Bateman, Raymond M., 13Bates, Carolina F., 26Battisto, Dina, 23Baverly, Kristi, 28Bazley, Conne, 22, 25Beardsall, Jeffrey, 20Beaubien, Jeff, 10Becic, Ensar, 37Becker, William J., 16Bédard, Raynald, 37Bedwell, Wendy, 16Beer, Jenay M., 24, 30Beer, R. Dirk, 25Belfore, Lee A., 32Belz, Steven, 15Beno, James P., 27Berg Rice, Valerie J., 18Beringer, Dennis B., 17, 26, 33Berka, Chris, 30, 32Berry, Katherine A., 28Best, Bradley, 25Best, Christopher J., 12Bhaskara, Adella, 27Bhise, Vivek, 13Bialystok, Ellen, 13Bier, Eric, 11Billings, Deborah R., 31Billman, Dorrit, 11Binnersley, Jackie, 30Bisantz, Ann M., 11, 14, 21, 31Bittner, Alvah C., 32Bittner, Rachel C. L., 32Blackledge, Christopher, 31Blackman, Harold S., 25Blackmon, Marilyn Hughes, 30Blalock, Lisa Durrance, 20Blechko, A., 20Blickensderfer, Elizabeth, 7Bliss, James P., 16, 17, 21, 27, 33Boehm-Davis, Deborah A., 7, 38Boelhouwer, Eric J., 34Boles, David B., 10Bolstad, Cheryl, 8Bolton, Matthew L., 22, 39Boren, Rebecca, 33Boring, Ronald Laurids, 11, 19,25, 28, 39Bornoe, Nis, 11Bowers, Clint, 26Bowman, Elizabeth K., 30Boyle, Linda Ng, 22, 35Bradshaw, Gary L., 38Branaghan, Russ, 7Br<strong>and</strong>t, Jeff, 37Branlat, Matthieu, 25Breedlove, Jesse, 23Brennan, Patricia C., 38Brill, J. Christopher, 20, 37Brooks, Johnell, 36Brougher, Samuel J., 17Brown, Christopher M., 26Brown, Jennifer L., 14Browning, Larry, 28Brownson, Erin, 22Bruce, Carrie, 16Brunette, Maria J., 15Bruton, Kate E., 31Bryan, Rex, 34Buchholz, Bryan, 20Bulkley, Nathan K., 17Burke, C. Shawn, 10, 20Burkolter, Dina, 37Burnett, David R., 36Burns, Catherine M., 23, 29Bush, Pamela McCauley, 15Bustamante, Ernesto A., 8, 20,21, 27, 33Byrd, Keena S., 22, 39Bzostek, Julie, 22Cades, David M., 38Caine, Kelly, 37Calderwood, Charles, 18Caldwell, Barrett S., 18, 22, 30,38Calhoun, Gloria L., 14, 17Calil, S. J., 23Campbell-Kyureghyan, Naira H.,15, 20, 30, 36Cantalupo, Claudio, 36Cao, Alex, 33Cao, Caroline G. L., 34Cao, Dapeng, 14, 21, 29Caplan, Stanley H., 10, 15, 28Capra, Mir<strong>and</strong>a, 27, 36Carayon, Pascale, 11, 12Card, Stuart K., 11Carlson, Eric, 21Carpenter, Thomas L., 12Carruth, Daniel, 31Carswell, C. Melody, 12, 21, 34Casali, John G., 39Casey, Steven M., 7, 8Cassenti, Daniel N., 36, 38Catrambone, Richard, 19Caufield, Kristin, 17Chadwick, Roger A., 8Chalmers, Bruce, 29Champagne, Julie, 12Ch<strong>and</strong>ler, Joseph F., 26Chaparro, Alex, 20, 30Chaparro, Barbara S, 6, 19Chapman, Roger J., 32Chappell, Sherry, 25Chen, Chang-Rong, 20Cheng, Li Wei, 20, 23Chevalier, Caroline, 19Chien, Shih-Hsiang, 36Chignell, Mark, 39Childs, Merilyn, 38Chin, Jessie, 24Chin, Matthew G., 18, 31Chintamani, Keshav, 33Choi, Hyeg-Joo, 30Christensen, James C., 12, 19Chrysler, Susan, 28Chua, Wei Liang Kenny, 20, 23Chung, Gregory K. W. K., 32Ciriello, Vincent M., 30Clark, Debra, 10Clark, Rylan M., 7, 33Clarke, Duncan, 12, 21Clausner, Timothy C., 26Clegg, Benjamin A., 20Close, David, 29, 31Cochran, David, 9Cohen, H. Harvey, 7, 9Cohen, Joseph, 29Collingwood, Ian, 37Collins, Shawn T., 18Colombo, Daniel, 16Conner, Craig P., 23Conner-Garcia, Thembi, 24Connors, Erik, 30, 33Contreras, Luis Rene, 12Cook, Maia B., 14Cooke, Nancy J., 6, 7, 11, 20, 21,25Cooper, Joel M., 13Cooper, Karen N., 20, 30Coovert, Michael D., 31Cosenzo, Keryl Ann 9Coughlin, Joseph F., 13Cova, Thomas, 38Cowley, Jennifer A., 28, 32Craig, Curtis, 10Creager, Whitney, 19Crebolder, Jacquelyn M., 20Crutchfield, Jerry, 8Cullen, Ralph H., 22Curry, David G., 14Curtis, Michael, 10Czaja, Sara J., 24D’Andrea, Laura, 24Darker, I. T., 20Dattel, Andrew R., 37Davies, T. Claire 11, 19, 23Davis, Bradley M., 20Davis, Fleet, 9, 16Davis, Iris M., 12, 14, 19Davis, James W., 32Davis, Jerry, 34Davis, Kermit G., 9, 15, 30de Saint Maurice, Guillaume, 12de Visser, Ewart, 23DeBartolo, Elizabeth, 33DeBlasio, Julia, 9Deibler, Nina, P., 22DeLucia, Patricia R., 7, 36Dempsey, Patrick G., 30Dennerlein, Jack T., 22, 31Dent, Kyle, 11DeVilbiss, Carita, 25Dickie, David Alex<strong>and</strong>er, 35DiDomenico, Angela, 15, 39Dierks, Meghan M., 25Dillard, Michael B., 10Dismukes, Key, 17Doebbeling, Bradley N., 9Dominguez, Cynthia Oakes, 6Donchin, Yoel, 18Donmez, Birsen, 11Douglas, Stephen E., 30Draper, Mark, H., 14Drews, Frank A., 13, 36, 37, 38,39Drexler, Julie, 26Droll, Jason A., 23, 29Ducarme, J. P., 39Duchowski, Andrew, 19Duran, Jasmine L., 20, 21Durkee, Kevin T., 20Durlach, Paula J., 31Durso, Francis T., 7, 8, 37Dutt, Varun, 38Dyre, Brian P., 17Eksuzian, Daniel, 17Elder, Nancy, 9Elliott, Linda R., 31Ellis, Ellen M., 23Ellis, Linda Upham, 30, 3140 PARTICIPANT INDEX


Ellis, R. Darin, 11, 33Ellis, Stephen R., 33Elson, Ila J., 12Endicott, Sarah A., 29, 39Endlsey, Mica R., 25Engstrom, Eric, 28Enos, Lynda, 7Espinosa, Paul D., 32Estepp, Justin R., 12, 14, 19Evans, Jarrett, 21Evans, Rochelle E., 31Evans, A. William, 20, 27, 31Evia, Carlos, 15Ezer, Neta, 24, 34Fairbanks, Rolin (Terry) J., 12, 14,27Fallon, Corey, 6Farry, Michael, 21Faulkner, Laurie, 9Fausset, Cara Bailey, 29Feldman, Moshe, 12Feng, Theo-Dric, 9Fennell, Karl, 30Fercho, Kelene, 27Ferguson, Sue A., 9Ferguson-Walter, Kimberly, 28Fern, Lisa, 25Ferris, Thomas, 23, 28Fidopiastis, Cali M., 14Fields, MaryAnne, 21Fincannon, Thomas D., 20, 27Fink, Nicole, 23Finomore, Victor S., 10, 18Fiore, Stephen M., 10, 12, 15, 16,20, 26Fisher, Alia, 9Fisk, Arthur D., 7, 22, 24, 28, 29,30, 34Flach, John M., 9, 17Fleming, Jacob, 8Fleming, Scott M., 30Fletcher, G., 10Fletcher, Laura M., 12Florian, John P., 26Fogarty, Gerard, 38Foley, Shannon, 18Fornette, Marie-Pierre, 12Forrest, E., 10Foster-Hunt, Tara, 34Fowlkes, Jennifer, 26Fox, Douglas, 11, 19Freiter, Stephen, 36Fricke, Nicola, 35Fu, Dan, 10Fulmer, Scott, 20Funke, Matthew E., 10Gacy, Marc, 8, 9Gagnon, Jean-François, 12Gale, A. G., 20Galloway, Trysha, 30Galster, Scott, 10Gärling, Anita, 28Garrett, S<strong>and</strong>ra K., 7, 18, 30, 39Garven, Sena, 16Gausepohl, Kim, 37Gaygen, Daniel E., 22George, Ivan, 32, 34German, Sinan, 37Gibb, R<strong>and</strong>all W., 33Gibson, Elizabeth, 7Gibson, Sheree, 16Gilbert, Jaimie L., 20Gillan, Douglas J., 8, 25, 32, 36,39Gilutz, Harel, 9Gluck, Kevin A., 11Goettl, Barry P., 10, 38Goldsworthy, Richard C., 35Gomer, Joshua A., 31Gonzalez, Cleotilde, 17, 38Goolsbee, Zach, 21Gore, Brian F., 38Gorman, Jamie C., 6, 20, 21Gorman, Paul, 27Grant, Russell C., 12, 21Grauel, Britta, 37Graumlich, James, 24Gray, Wayne D., 11, 19, 38Green, Marc, 29Green, Paul A., 8Green, Thomas F., 30Greenwood, Pamela, 19Grenchus, Edward J., 20Gribbons, William, 11Grier, Rebecca A., 13, 26, 35Grigg, Sarah, 23Griggs, Katherine R., 34Grubbs, R. L., 39Grundgeiger, T., 36Guarino, Sean L., 33Guarrera, Theresa K., 14, 21Gugerty, Leo, 36, 38Gulum, Muhammet S., 31Gurses, Ayse P., 27Güss, C. Dominik, 21Haas, Ellen, 21Hagg, Heather, 9Hah, Sechang, 8Hailston, Kenneth, 25Hall, Allyson, 32Hall, Victoria, 22Hallbeck, M. Susan, 20, 34, 36Halverson, Richard, 36Hameed, Shameem, 28Han, Q., 12Hancock, Peter A., 7, 10, 13, 35Haro, Elizabeth, 15, 18, 35Harper, Karen, 33Harper-Sciarini Michelle, 10Harrison, William J., 32Harrop, Sarrah, 35Hausen, Michelle J., 10Havig, Paul, 10, 23, 38Hayes, Caroline, 17Haynes, Courtney Ann, 35Haynes, Scott, 34He, Jibo, 37Headley, Donald, 25Hedge, Alan, 22, 29, 34Heller-Ono, Alison R., 18Helton, William S., 10, 17Hendrick, Hal W., 13, 27, 28Hendricks, Samantha D., 37Henneman, Richard, 34Henrickson Parker, Sarah, 17, 18,39Herrmann, Donald, 15Hervet, Guillaume, 12Hesse, Bradford W., 11Heyne, Kyle, 16Hicks, Michael, 19Higgins, Laura, 28Hildebr<strong>and</strong>t, Michael, 19, 28Hill, Susan, 21Hilton, Rita, 21Histon, Jonathan M., 33Ho, Geoffrey, 33Hoeft, Raegan M., 8, 18Hoenig, Pia, 31Hoffman, Robert R., 11, 29Holbrook, Jon, 17Holiday, Christine L., 22Holl<strong>and</strong>s, Justin G., 14Hooey, Rebecca L., 39Hoonakker, Peter, 11, 15Hoonhout, H. C. M., (Jettie), 22Hoover, Adam, W., 12Horn, Zachary, 16Hornick, Richard J., 13Horning, Dain S., 26Horrey, William J., 20Hoskins, J., 12Hou, Ming, 33Houston, Rebecca J., 19Howard, Robert, 28, 31Hu, Yao, 38Huang, Su-Wei, 29Huang, Yunchen, 37Hudlicka, Eva, 18Hudson, Jeffrey A., 30Hughes, Charles E., 26Hughes, Jamie, 38Hui-Lio, Cindy, 12, 34Humphrey, Curtis M., 34Hung, Yu-Hsiu, 18, 39Hunter, Aren C., 34, 37Hunter, David R., 29Hurwitz, Elisa, 29Hurwitz, Joshua B., 27Hutchins, Shaun, 9Hutton, Angela J., 22Hyatt, John, 16Hyönä, Jukka, 8Ikpe, Odi, 12Imada, Andrew S., 7Imbeau, Daniel, 36Inagaki, Kazuyoshi, 35Inagaki, Toshiyuki, 39Ing, Alex<strong>and</strong>er, 22Irwin, Curt B., 23Isenberg, Timothy H., 22Ising, Kurt, 29Itoh, Makoto, 39Jacobs, Karen, 22, 25, 34Jamieson, Greg A., 14Jampana, Varun V., 20Jardina, Jo Rain, 34Jastrzembski, Tiffany S., 11Jenkins, Michael, 21Jenkins, S. A., 34Jenness, James, 13Jensen, R<strong>and</strong>y, 10Jentsch, Florian, 10, 12, 14, 20,31Jeon, Myounghoon, 23Jeong, Kyeong-Ah, 34Jerome, Christian J., 33Jex Courter, Barbara, 23Jeykumar, Denzil, 19Jing, Xiaolu, 20Jipp, Meike, 18, 30Jobes, C. C., 39Jodlowski, Mark T., 38John, Bonnie E., 6, 30Johnson, Brian, 8Johnson, Daniel A., 14, 29Johnson, Monica, 9Johnson, Peter, 22Johnson, Ryan C., 31Johnson, Steven L., 34Johnson, Vanessa, 12Jones, Doug, 37Joseph, Caroline, 36Jothi, Vaithianathan, 13Jung, Kihyo, 23, 28Justice, Connie F., 9Kaber, David B., 11, 17Kajikawa, Tadahiko, 35Kaku, Daisuke, 30Kalish, Julia A., 12Kalsher, Michael J., 22, 34Kancler, David, 10Kar, Gourab, 39Karsh, Ben-Tzion, 7, 12, 15, 25Karwowski, Waldemar, 11, 15,18Katou, Kazuhiko, 35Kearns, Suzanne K., 26Keebler, Joseph R., 14, 20, 27Keillor, Jocelyn M., 33Kelaher, Daniel P., 39Keller, David, 21, 38Kelley, Christopher M., 28Kelley, John F. (Jeff), 9Kelley, Troy D., 36Kellman, Philip J., 26Kemmerer, Kacey, 21Kempic, Joy, 28, 37, 39Kern, Rosalie P., 10Khalifa, H., Ezzat, 34Khan, Nawaz, 29Khare, Rachna, 29Kidd, David G., 19Kiken, Ariana, 20Kim, H., 36Kim, Heon-Jeong, 35Kim, Moonsung, 28Kim, Sang-Hwan, 17Kim, Soyun, 35Kim, Sujin, 28Kirlik, Alex, 21Kitajima, Muneo, 35Kitazaki, Satoshi, 35Klein, Gary, 6Klein, Helen Altman, 17Klein, M., 21Klein, Martina I., 12Kleiner, Brian M., 15, 39Kline, Keith A., 19Kluge, Annette, 37Knapik, Gregory G., 9Knoop, M., 22Knott, Benjamin, 37Ko, Peiyi, 31Kodagoda, Neesha, 29Koelle, David, 21Koenecke, Corey, 38ParticipantIndexPARTICIPANT INDEX 41


ParticipantIndexKoh, Ranieri, Yung Ing, 18Kokot, Douglas, 22Koneczny, Sonja, 34Kong, Byung Don, 22Kortum, Philip, 19, 31, 35Kotnour, Timothy, 26Kotowski, Susan E., 9, 15Koubek, Richard J., 27Kraemer, Sara, 36Kramer, Arthur F., 20Kramer, Chelsea, 34Kramer, Heidi S., 36Kring, Jason, 16Krishnan, Anita P., 15Krozel, Jimmy, 38Kubose, Tate, 29Kuroda, Kouichi, 35Kwon, Ochae, 23Kyriacou, Panayiotis, 30Lackey, Stephanie, 16Lacson, Frank C., 14, 25, 38Lafleur, Chris, 25Lafond, Daniel, 12Lagattuta, Nicholas C., 12, 18, 24,31Lambert, Annie, 33Lammers, Vincent, 13Lampton, Donald, 16L<strong>and</strong>aeta, Rafael, 26L<strong>and</strong>ry, Steven J., 22, 27, 30Langkamer, Krista L., 16Lansing, Charissa R., 20Larson, Nancy, 12, 28Laumann, Karin, 25Lavender, Steven A., 9, 36Laviana, A., 17Lazzara, Elizabeth H., 15, 16, 21LeCocq, Andy, 7Lee, Chin Chin, 24Lee, David L., 31Lee, G., 12Lee, Gyusung, 34Lee, Hohyun, 17Lee, John D., 7, 11, 27, 35Lee, Sangwon, 27Lee, Wonsup, 28Lee, Yi-Ching, 37Lee, Yoon Suk, 32Lemen, Lisa, 9Lesch, Mary F., 20Lew, Roger, 17Lewis, Michael, 22, 25, 36, 38Li, David, 31Li, Siying, 15Libbey, David, 20Lin, Cheng-Jhe, 15, 17Lin, James Jeng-Weei, 25Lin, Jia-Hua, 26, 39Lin, Li, 14Lindberg, Robert, 38Linegang, Michael, 35Lintern, Gavan, 6Litaker, Harry, 28, 31Littlejohn, Robin, 12, 18, 31Liu, D., 34Liu, Dahai, 33Liu, Di, 36Liu, Jian, 15Liu, Yili, 11Lizza, Gretchen, 26, 35Llinas, James, 31Lockett-Reynolds Janae, 18Lockhart, Thurmon E., 15, 35Loewenhardt, Ruth A. K., 22Loft, Shayne, 27Lojewski, Renee A., 26Long, Kevin M., 33Long, Lindsay O., 31Lottridge, Danielle, 39Luce, Adam C., 30Luke, Terri, 17Lum, Heather C., 12, 18, 20, 24,31Lund, Arnold, 7Luong, Mary G., 28Lutz, T. J., 39MacDougall, H. G., 36MacKenzie, Christine L., 37MacKenzie, I. Scott, 39MacLeod, Kathi-Ann, 38Madhavan, Poornima, 20, 21, 27,33, 35, 38Maikala, Rammohan V., 30Malone, Thomas B., 18Manes, Daniel I., 14Manser, Michael, 19Manzey, Dietrich, 18, 27, 33Marklin, Richard W., 30, 36Markowitz, Jackie, 22Marquard, Jenna L., 18Marraffino, Matthew, 31Marras, William S., 9, 11Marshall, Matthew, 33Martin, Bernard J., 35, 39Martin, Glenn A., 16, 26Maruyama, Yasunori, 35Marx, Morris, 29Mathias, Anne, 14Matthews, Gerald, 10, 18Mauney, Daniel, W., 13, 37Mayer, Andrew K., 29Mayhorn, Christopher B., 24, 28,35Maynard, Wayne, 26McBride, Sara E., 30McCarley, Jason S., 20, 22, 25, 37McCurry, Malcolm, 38McDermott, Patricia L., 9, 29, 38McEwen, Timothy R., 9McGarry, Kathleen A., 33McGorry, Raymond W., 26, 39McGrane, Kimberly, 20McIntyre, Scott, 35McKinnon, Matt, 22McLaughlin, Anne Collins, 12, 16,28, 37McManus, M., Sue, 9McMullin, Dianne L., 15McNeese, Michael D., 25, 38Medeiros-Ward, Nate, 13Megasari, Ashitra, 34Meglan, Dwight, 32Mehler, Bruce, 13Mehta, Ranjana, 35Mendel, Jeremy, 19, 28Mendonca, David, 38Mentis, Helena M., 18Merkle, Edgar, 30Merlo, James L., 32Meshkati, Najmedin, 28Meyer, Joachim, 9, 27Meza, Manuel, 23Miguez, Symone A., 20Milham, Laura, 26Militello, Laura, 6, 15, 35Miller, Anne, 15, 17Miller, Christopher A., 17, 28Miller, Matthew, 35Miller, Nita Lewis, 21Miller, Peter, 32Mills, Thomas, 39Min, Jung Sang, 22Minkov, Yaniv, 33Minowa, Yosuke, 35Mitchell, Diane Kuhl, 39Mitzner, Tracy L., 30Mlyniec, Paul, 32Mobley, Catherine, 31Molin, Arthur, 10Momtahan, Kathryn, 34Monk, Christopher A., 19, 29,30, 37Monnin, Jason W., 12Mont’Alvão, Claudia, 34Montague, Enid, 36Moon, Brian M., 29Moore, Jennifer, 20Moore, Kristin S., 31Morgan, Justin F., 35Morison, Alex<strong>and</strong>er M., 32Morita, P. P., 23Morris, G. H., 28Morris, John, 25Morrow, Dan, 24Mosier, Kathleen, 7, 17Moss, Jason D., 12Mouloua, Mustapha, 20, 37Mueller, Jessica, 20Muller, Hendrik, 23Mullick, Abir, 29, 39Multer, Jordan, 19Murphy, Carrie E., 37Murray, Devon, 21Murray, Michael, 24Murray, Susan L., 31Muse, Lindsey, 31Musters, Adrian, 37, 38Muth, Eric R., 12Myers, Christopher W., 25Myhre, Margaret (Marnie), 7Myung, RoHae, 22Nagashima, Sam O., 32Nair, Sankaran N., 24Nakayasu, Hidetoshi, 23Narakesari, Shruti, 34Nastasia, Iuliana, 36Nathan, Howard, 34Nelson, Deborah L., 11Nelson, Erik T., 37Nemeth, Christopher, 17, 25,27Nemire, Kenneth, 14, 26Nesteruk, Hope E. J., 10Neyedli, Heather F., 14Nguyen, Vickie, 31, 34Nicholson, Denise M., 14, 16,26Norman, Joseph W., 26Normark, Carl Jörgen, 28Normore, Lorraine, 11Noro, Kageyu, 30Nussbaum, Maury A., 32Oberheid, Hendrik, 8O’Brien, Marita A., 22O’Brien, Niall V., 30Ockerman, Jennifer, 21O’Connor, Paul, 37Oinonen, Krista, 8Oksama, Lauri, 8Olson, Katherine E., 28Ong, Lay Teng, 18Onken, Jeffrey D., 38Onnasch, Linda, 33Oron-Gilad, Tal, 33Orvis, Kara L., 16Orvis, Karin, 16Ososky, Scott, 31Ott, Tammy E., 36Otvos, Shane Paul, 37Ou, Bo, 18Owens, Justin W., 6, 19Oxstr<strong>and</strong>, Johanna, 11, 25, 28Pagano, Christopher C., 31Pak, Richard, 23, 24, 28Palmer, Evan M., 26, 30Palmieri, Patrick A., 36P<strong>and</strong>ya, Abhilash K., 33Panganiban, April Rose, 18, 37Papanek, Paula, 36Paquet, Victor, 31Parasuraman, Raja, 7, 10, 19, 20,27Parijat, Prakriti, 35Park, Adrian, 12, 32, 34Park, Daewoo, 12Park, Jangwoon, 28Park, Taezoon, 18Parthasarathy, Sundararajan, 19Parush, Avi, 7, 33, 34, 37Pastel, Robert, 34Patterson, Emily, 9, 15Patterson, Michael, J., 26Patterson, Patrick E., 10, 23,Patton, Debra J., 36Patton, Evan W., 19Pavlas, Davin, 10, 16, 20Pennathur, Arunkumar, 12Pennathur, Priyadarshini R., 14,21, 35Peres, S. Camille, 31, 34Perry, Nathan, 38Perry, Shawna J., 12, 14Persensky, Julius J., 25Peters, Kirsten, A., 30Peterson, Douglas, 27Peterson, Matthew S., 38Peterson, Stephen D., 33Pew, Richard W., 11Peyton, Gordon G., 33Pfaff, Mark S., 25, 27Pfautz, Jonathan, 21Pfeifer, John C., 8Pharmer, James A., 10, 32Phillips, Daniel, 33Phillips, Elizabeth, 20, 27Phillips, Jeffrey B., 26Phillips, Rachel R., 33Pinales, Rosalinda, 34Pinder, Shane D., 11, 19, 2342 PARTICIPANT INDEX


Piper, Adam K., 34Pleban, Robert J., 12Plott, Christopher, 38Pollack, Jay, 28, 35Pollack-Nelson, Carol, 14Polson, Peter G., 30Popov, Lubomir, 29Portnoy, Felix, 20, 23, 35, 38Powell, Chris, 31Prewett, Matthew S., 31Price, Margaux M., 23Priest, Heather A., 20Prinzel, Lawrence J., 17Prinzo, Roni, 27Proctor, Robert W., 28, 34Purvis, Cynthia, 22Quate, Allison, 17Ragsdale, Stuart A., 20Rakauskas, Michael E., 13, 19Ralph, Jason, 38Rantanen, Esa M., 8, 17, 27, 39Raslear, Thomas, 19Ratwani, Raj, 38, 39Rauschenberger, Robert, 25Ray, Jessica M., 10, 12, 31Reichenbach, Juliane, 33Reid, Christopher R., 15Reimer, Bryan, 13Reina, Gabriel, 29Rempel, David M., 30, 31Repperger, Daniel W., 10Resnick, Marc L., 7, 11, 14, 22Rhoades, Timothy, 9Rice, Stephen, 21, 27, 38Rice, Valerie J., 13, 18, 25Riddle, Dawn L., 32Riley, Jennifer M., 9, 14, 16Rima, Noel, 20Risser, Matthew R., 14Rivera, Javier, 12Rivera, Joy, 37, 39Rizzo, Matthew, 11Roberts, Shelley, 33Robertson, Michelle, 22Rockwell, Alison K., 37Rodes, Will, 36Rodgers, Stuart, 11Rodrick, David, 13Rodriguez, Michael A., 26Roettger, S., 18Rogers, Michelle L., 34Rogers, Wendy A., 22, 24, 30,34Rosen, Michael A., 15, 20, 21, 24Roth, Emilie, 11, 14, 21, 25, 27,33Rousek, Justin B., 34Rousseau, Robert, 12Rovira, Ericka, 10Ruark, Gregory A., 16Rudolph, Michael, 8Ruff, Heath A., 14Ruffner, John W., 22, 33Russ, Alissa L., 9, 15Russell, Deborah C., 34Russell, W. J., 34Rutley, Mark, 33Rye, Jeff, 28Saboe, Kristin N., 31Saginus, Kyle A., 30Salas, Eduardo, 10, 15, 16, 20, 21,24Salazar, Rebekah A., 22Saleem, Jason J., 9Salehi, Arash, 37Salud, Ellen, 38Salvendy, Gavriel, 7, 28, 34Salvucci, Dario D., 30Samaras, George, M., 7Samms, Charneta, 22, 39Samore, Matthew, 36Sanchez, Julian, 31S<strong>and</strong>ers, Elizabeth B.-N., 36S<strong>and</strong>erson, Penelope M., 17, 21,32, 34, 36Sanford, Jon, 16, 34Sarter, Nadine, 22, 23, 28Sasaki, Takayuki, 30Sasangohar, Farzan, 39Savage-Knepshield, Pamela A., 32Sawyer, Benjamin D., 20Sawyer, Michael W., 27Scerbo, Mark W., 32Schabo, Pete, 9Scharff, Lauren V. F., 19Schatz, Sae, 26Schaub, Harald, 21Schoelles, Michael J., 19, 38Schraagen, Jan Maarten, 29Schreckenghost, Debra, 10, 28Schultz, Noel, 29Schulze-Kissing D., 18Schumacher, Robert M., 15, 30Schur, Courtney I., 15Schuster, David, 10Schvaneveldt, Roger W., 10Schwerha, Diana, 16Sciarini, Lee W., 14Scielzo, S<strong>and</strong>ro, 16, 25Scott, Ronald, 14Scott, Stacey D., 29, 33, 39Seagull, F. Jacob, 32Seales, W. B., 12, 21Sebok, Angelia, 22, 38Seegmiller, Janelle, 13Self, Nate, 16Sellers, Brittany, 12Sethumadhavan, Arathi, 8Shaikh, A. Dawn, 19Shapiro, Alice, 38Shapiro, Ronald G., 7, 15Shappell, Scott A., 27, 28Sharit, Joseph, 24Sharma, Balaji, 15Shattuck, Lawrence G., 21Shaw, Tyler H., 10, 18Shebilske, Wayne, 34Shehab, R<strong>and</strong>a L., 16Sheridan, Thomas B., 11Shin, Gwanseob, 15Shirkey, Edwin, 20Shorr, Daniel J., 34Shrestha, Saurav, 6, 19Shuffler, Marissa L., 15, 16, 21Siebeneck, Laura, 38Sikdar, Siddhartha, 10Simmons, Rita G., 26Sims, Valerie K., 12, 18, 24, 31Sinatra, Anne M., 31Singer, Michael J., 33Sittig, Dean F., 12Skawinski, Valerian A., 14Slagle, Jason M., 18Small, Ronald, 38Smallman, Harvey S., 14, 25, 32Smith, Am<strong>and</strong>a, 6, 19Smith, Brent A., 10Smith, Jeffrey A., 30Smith, Jeffrey J., 20, 39Smith, Kip, 17Smith, Mac, 20Smith, Michael W., 15Smith, Rebekah E., 27Smith, Thomas J., 7, 34, 36Smith-Jackson, Tonya L., 9, 14,15, 28, 29, 32, 39Smith-Jentsch, Kimberly A., 12Smoker, Timothy J., 35, 37Snow, Laverne A., 36Soken, Nelson, 10Sommerich, Carolyn M., 30, 36Sorensen, Douglas, 25Spain, R<strong>and</strong>all D., 33Spitzer, Mark, 31Splittstoesser, Riley E., 9, 30Spokus, Diane, 16Sprang, Marcia, 30Sprufera, John F., 12Squire, Peter, 19, 20St. John, Mark, 14, 21Stachowkiak, Christopher, 21Stagl, Kevin C., 26Stainmesse, Emmanuelle, 12Stanley, Laura, 20Stanley, Raymond, M., 23Stanney, Kay, 26Stanton, Nash S., 20Steelman-Allen, Kelly S., 20, 22Steinberg, Sofia, 22Stelzer, Emily M., 13, 17Stevens, Ron, 30Stine-Morrow, Elizabeth A. L., 24Stone, Nancy, 33Stone, Richard T., 21, 24, 31Story, Molly Follette, 30Straeter, Oliver, 25Strater, Laura D., 9, 16, 25Strater, Sean, 9Strawderman, Lesley, 17, 37Strayer, David L., 13Stringfellow, Paris F., 28Stronge, Aideen, 23Strup, Stephen, 12Stuart-Buttle, Carol, 9Su, Andy, 31Sublette, M., 21Sui, Zheng, 14Sundt, T. M., 17, 18Sung, Wooyoung, 39Swanson, Ron, 10Switzer, Fred S., 12Swoboda, Jennifer C., 36Szalma, James L., 10, 14Tan, Chin-An, 33Tan, Pei-Hsiu, 37Taylor, Brian, 10Taylor, Grant S., 14, 33Taylor, Purcell, 10Tear, Morgan J., 32Telner, Jason A., 7, 13Teo, Leonghwee, 30Tharanathan, An<strong>and</strong>, 19, 37Thompson, David, 7Thompson, Matthew B., 32Thompson, Shelby, 28, 31Thronesbery, Carroll, 10Thuring, Manfred, 35Tidball, Brian E., 33Tinsley, Michelle L., 25Tokuda, Satoru, 30Topping, Marisa, 29, 39Torenvliet, Gerard, 7, 29Tossell, Chad C., 10, 33Trafton, J. Gregory, 30, 38, 39Tremblay, Sébastien, 12Trent, Stoney, 25Tretten, Phillip, 28Truxler, Robert, 14Tsai, Jennifer, 21, 24Tucker, Jennifer S., 12Turner, T. Robert, 7, 32Ungvarsky, Diane M., 25Usher, John M., 17Vacher, Anthony, 12van de Ven, Josine, 29V<strong>and</strong>len, Kimberly A., 9VanPol, Ruben, 22Vargas, Joseph C., 8Vashitz, Geva, 9Vaughn-Cooke, Monifa, 36Vause, Nancy, 25Velagapudi, Prasanna, 36Venkatesh, B., 36Vidulich, Michael A., 10Vigilante, William, 9, 26Vincenzi, Dennis, 33Vink, Peter, 20Vogel-Walcutt, Jennifer J., 26Voglewede, Philip A., 30Voshell, Martin, 25Vredenburgh, Alison G., 29, 34Vredenburgh, Michael J., 36Vu, Kim-Phuong L., 11Waddington, Robert, 32Wadhera, R., 18Walker, Alex<strong>and</strong>er D., 12Walker, Bruce N., 9, 23Walker, Donieka R., 10Wallace, Louise, 30Walters, Elizabeth, 17Wampler, Jeffrey, 14Wang, Huadong, 36Wang, Jijun, 22Wang, Ying, 13, 20Warm, Joel S., 7, 10, 11, 18Waters Deppa Shelley, 14Watson, Ginger, 7Watson, Jeffery, 36Watson, M. O., 34Wears, Robert L., 14, 15, 25, 27Weaver, Melissa, 18Weber, Bernhard, 8Weil, Shawn A., 17Weinger, Matthew B., 18Weldon, Dave, 10Werner, Nicole E., 38Wetterneck, Tosha, 25Whiting, Harry S., 16ParticipantIndexPARTICIPANT INDEX 43


ParticipantIndexWhitlock, Laura A., 37Wick, Holly S., 18Wickens, Christopher D., 22, 27, 38Wiegmann, Douglas. A., 17, 18, 39Wiesenthal, David L., 13Wiggins, Mark, 38Wildman, Jessica L., 15, 16Wilhelm, Marianne, 31Wilson, Darren P., 18Wilson, Elizabeth L., 18Wilson, Glenn F., 12, 14, 19Winchester, Woodrow W., 20, 39Windell, David T., 15, 39Wogalter, Michael, S., 35Wong, B. L. William, 29Woodbridge, Peter A., 9Woodcock, Andrée, 30, 36Woods, David D., 6, 17, 32Woolley, Charles B., 12, 36Wooten, Samuel R., 15, 16, 21Wu, Changxu, 11, 17, 18, 19Wu, Peggy, 17Wuest, Ellen, 22Xavier, Luiz F., 15, 21Xiao, Yan, 27Yagoda, Rosemarie, 31Yalamarty, Aishwarya, 20Yalla, Sai V., 36Yang, Gang, 9Yang, Xi, 18Yeh, Michelle, 19Yin, Shanqing, 18Yoo, Hyo-Sang, 27Yoo, Hyun Seung, 18Yoon, Sunghye, 28You, Heecheon, 23, 28Younan, Nick, 29Young, Douglas, 29Young, J., 36Young, Jason A., 29Youngblood, Heather, 32Youssef, Yassar, 34Yu, Shin-Yuan, 39Zaccaro, Steve, 21Zachary, Wayne, 25Zackowitz, Ilene B., 29Zayas-Cabán, Teresa, 18Zedlitz, Jason D., 20Zehner, Gregory F., 30Zeng, Liang, 28Zhang, Hongbo, 15Zhang, J., 34Zhang, Wei, 20Zhang, Xiaoyue, 35Zhao, Guozhen, 18, 19Zheng, Bin, 37Zheng, Xianjun Sam, 25Zhou, Huiping, 39Zhou, Mi, 34Zillich, Alan J., 9Postdoctoral ResearchAwardsSenior Research AwardsResearch in U.S.federal laboratories in:Machine/<strong>Human</strong> Interface<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>Industrial Engineering<strong>Ergonomics</strong>Participating laboratories include:National Institute for Occupational Safety & HealthUS Army Research LaboratoryAir Force Research LaboratoryUS Army Natick Soldier Research, Development<strong>and</strong> Engineering CenterFAA/Civil Aerospace Medical InstituteNaval Medical Research Center/Naval HealthResearch Center Competitive awards for independentresearch Many opportunities open to non-U.S. as wellas U.S. citizens 12-month awards renewable to 3 years Annual stipend ranging from $42,000 to$75,000 for recent Ph.D. recipients;higher for additional experienceRelocation, professional travel, healthinsurance Applications deadlines — February 1, May 1,August 1, November 1Detailed program information, including instructions onhow to apply, is available on the NRC Web site atwww.national-academies.org/rapApplicants must initiate dialogue with prospective Advisersat the labs before their anticipated deadline. Applicationsmust be submitted online directly to the NRC. CVs will notbe accepted. Questions should be directed to the NRC at202-334-2760 (tel) or rap@nas.edu.44 PARTICIPANT INDEX


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CogSci 2010“Cognition in Flux”The 32 nd Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science SocietyOregon Convention CenterPortl<strong>and</strong>, Oregon, USAAugust 11-14, 2010Conference Co-Chairs: Stellan Ohlsson <strong>and</strong> Richard CatrambonePlenary Speakers:Peter GerjetsMarsha LovettPhilip David ZelazoSubmissions due: February 6, 2010http://cognitivesciencesociety.org/conference2010/index.htmlCognitive scientists from around the world are encouraged to submit their work <strong>and</strong> to attend CogSci2010,the world’s premiere annual conference on cognitive science. The conference aims to represent a broadspectrum of topics, issues, <strong>and</strong> methodologies, so submissions are welcome in all areas of cognitivescience. In addition to submitted papers, posters, <strong>and</strong> symposia, there will be invited presentations bycognitive change. The plenary speakers include Peter Gerjets (University of Tübingen), Marsha Lovett The 2010 AnnualMeeting will be the 32 nd in the Society’s history, <strong>and</strong> it will be held at the Oregon Convention Center, inbeautiful Portl<strong>and</strong>, Oregon, USA.46 ADVERTISERS


ASHGATENew <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> titles…Browse our latest offerings <strong>and</strong> purchase display copies at a 50% discount…The ETTOPrinciple:Efficiency-ThoroughnessTrade-OffWhy ThingsThat Go RightSometimesGo WrongErik Hollnagel,MINES ParisTech, France“Hollnagel combines an accessible stylewith rigorous logic…Healthcare practitionerswill find inspiration <strong>and</strong> greater underst<strong>and</strong>ingof the challenges of providing safe carein an underspecified <strong>and</strong> frequentlyintractable system. Bravo!”—Rob Robson, Chief Patient Safety Officer,Winnipeg Regional Health AuthorityJune 20<strong>09</strong> 162 pagesHardback 978-0-7546-7677-5Paperback 978-0-7546-7678-2The <strong>Human</strong>ContributionUnsafe Acts,Accidents<strong>and</strong> HeroicRecoveriesJames Reason,University ofManchester, UK“While humans arenormally treated as a hazard <strong>and</strong> an unsafesystem component, this book looks at thehuman as a hero—as the single force thaton a significant number of occasions hassaved systems from disaster…Elegantly<strong>and</strong> entertainingly written, it is an invaluablesupply of information <strong>and</strong> inspiration,as well as a pointer to how the thinkingabout safety should develop.”—Erik Hollnagel, MINES ParisTech, FranceDecember 2008 310 pagesHardback 978-0-7546-7400-9Paperback 978-0-7546-7402-3Mind,Machine<strong>and</strong> MoralityToward aPhilosophyof <strong>Human</strong>-TechnologySymbiosisPeter A. Hancock,University ofCentral Florida“An amazing breadth of ideas <strong>and</strong> conceptsthat will challenge readers…Drawingupon sources as diverse as Aurelius<strong>and</strong> Asimov, Hancock compels designersto face fundamental philosophical <strong>and</strong>moral considerations concerning not justhow technology will work with people,but why such technology is developed…”—John D. Lee, University of IowaJuly 20<strong>09</strong> 202 pagesHardback 978-0-7546-7358-3TheMultitaskingMythH<strong>and</strong>lingComplexityin Real-WorldOperationsLoukia D.Loukopoulos,San José StateUniversity ResearchFoundation, R. Key Dismukes,<strong>and</strong> Immanuel Barshi, all atNASA Ames Research CenterASHGATE STUDIES IN HUMANFACTORS FOR FLIGHT OPERATIONS“…not only readable <strong>and</strong> enjoyable,but practically useful <strong>and</strong> relevant as well…”—Sidney W. A. Dekker, Lund UniversitySchool of Aviation, SwedenFebruary 20<strong>09</strong> 202 pagesHardback 978-0-7546-7382-8Paperback 978-0-7546-7997-4Cognitive Work Analysis:Coping with ComplexityDaniel P. Jenkins, Neville A. Stanton,Paul M. Salmon <strong>and</strong> Guy H. WalkerDecember 2008. 298 pagesHardback. 978-0-7546-7026-1Crew ResourceManagementCritical EssaysEdited by Eduardo Salas,Katherine A. Wilson <strong>and</strong> Eleana EdensCRITICAL ESSAYS ON HUMANFACTORS IN AVIATIONIncludes 21 previously published journal articlesMay 20<strong>09</strong>. 448 pagesHardback. 978-0-7546-2829-3<strong>Human</strong> Error in AviationEdited by R. Key DismukesCRITICAL ESSAYS ON HUMANFACTORS IN AVIATIONIncludes 24 previously published journal articlesMarch 20<strong>09</strong>. 604 pagesHardback. 978-0-7546-2831-6<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> MethodsA Practical Guidefor Engineering <strong>and</strong> DesignNeville A. Stanton, Paul M. Salmon,Guy H. Walker, Chris Baber<strong>and</strong> Daniel P. JenkinsIncludes 101 b&w illustrations2005. 592 pagesPaperback. 978-0-7546-4661-7<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> for NavalMarine Vehicle Design<strong>and</strong> OperationJonathan M. RossHUMAN FACTORS IN DEFENCEFebruary 20<strong>09</strong>. 244 pagesHardback. 978-0-7546-7625-6Just CultureBalancing Safety<strong>and</strong> AccountabilitySidney Dekker2007. 166 pagesPaperback. 978-0-7546-7267-8Motorcycling <strong>and</strong> LeisureUnderst<strong>and</strong>ing theRecreational PTW RiderPaul Broughton <strong>and</strong> Linda WalkerHUMAN FACTORS IN ROAD AND RAIL TRANSPORTMay 20<strong>09</strong>. 216 pagesHardback. 978-0-7546-7501-3Performance Under StressEdited by Peter A. Hancock<strong>and</strong> James L. SzalmaHUMAN FACTORS IN DEFENCE2008. 406 pagesHardback. 978-0-7546-7059-9Resilience EngineeringPerspectivesVolume 2: Preparation<strong>and</strong> RestorationEdited by Christopher P. Nemeth,Erik Hollnagel <strong>and</strong> Sidney DekkerASHGATE STUDIES IN RESILIENCE ENGINEERINGJuly 20<strong>09</strong>. 310 pagesHardback. 978-0-7546-7520-4Safer SurgeryAnalysing Behaviourin the Operating TheatreEdited by Rhona Flin <strong>and</strong> Lucy MitchellSeptember 20<strong>09</strong>. 482 pagesHardback. 978-0-7546-7536-5Safety at the Sharp EndA Guide to Non-Technical SkillsRhona Flin, Paul O’Connor<strong>and</strong> Margaret Crichton2008. 330 pagesPaperback. 978-0-7546-4600-6Underst<strong>and</strong>ing <strong>Human</strong>Error in Mine SafetyGeoff Simpson, Tim Horberry<strong>and</strong> Jim JoyIncludes 11 tables <strong>and</strong> 16 figuresOctober 20<strong>09</strong>. 174 pagesHardback. 978-0-7546-7869-4PO Box 2225Williston, VT 05495-2225Toll-free: 1-800-535-9544orders@ashgate.comwww.ashgate.com/<strong>HFES</strong>20<strong>09</strong>Stop by the Ashgate booth (#10) to speak with Senior CommissioningEditor, Guy Loft, browse our recent titles for conference discounts <strong>and</strong> fordetails on the Mind, Machine <strong>and</strong> Morality book signing by Peter A. Hancock.ADVERTISERS 47


Notes48 NOTES


ESSENTIAL READING from <strong>HFES</strong>The <strong>HFES</strong> Digital Library-ArchiveThe <strong>HFES</strong> Digita l Library is a comprehensiveonline collection of the back volumesof four serials published by the <strong>Human</strong><strong>Factors</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Ergonomics</strong> Society: <strong>Human</strong><strong>Factors</strong> (1958–2006), <strong>Ergonomics</strong> in Design(1993–2006), Annual Meeting Proceedings(1972–2006), <strong>and</strong> Reviews of <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong><strong>and</strong> <strong>Ergonomics</strong> (Volumes 1–2). Anyone interested in research <strong>and</strong>the application of research about how to improve the interactionof humans with products, systems, tools, <strong>and</strong> environments will findthe Digital Library-Archive of inestimable value.Free to <strong>HFES</strong> members, $950 for nonmembers, $1,900 for institutions (agencydiscounts are honored). Details at http://www.hfes.org/Publications/ProductDetail.aspx?ProductId=8220<strong>09</strong> <strong>HFES</strong> Salary <strong>and</strong> Compensation Survey ReportThe report of the 20<strong>09</strong> survey contains the results, in tabular form,from 613 <strong>HFES</strong> members in the United States based on their 2008employment <strong>and</strong> consulting income. Responses cover pay (cash <strong>and</strong>nonmonetary compensation) <strong>and</strong> benefits such as health insuranceor defined contribution plans. In addition, for the first time since <strong>HFES</strong>began surveying its members, the questionnaire included questionsBest of <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>: Thirty Classic Contributions to<strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>/<strong>Ergonomics</strong> Science <strong>and</strong> EngineeringEdited by Nancy J. Cooke & Eduardo SalasIn this book are 30 of the best papers published in the 50-year historyof <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>: The Journal of the <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Ergonomics</strong>Society. The papers are categorized in one of three broad areas: Applications,Technology/Engineering/Physiology, <strong>and</strong> <strong>Human</strong> Performance.They are the most highly cited <strong>and</strong> valued by a representativeJournal of Cognitive Engineering <strong>and</strong> Decision MakingJCEDM focuses on research that seeks to underst<strong>and</strong> how people engagein cognitive work in real-world settings <strong>and</strong> the developmentof systems that support that work. JCEDM differs from most journalsby supporting research that grapples with the messy, hard-to-define,Augmented Cognition: A Practitioner’s GuideEdited by Dylan D. Schmorrow & Kay M. StanneyReviews of <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Ergonomics</strong>This <strong>HFES</strong> annual series condenses HF/E knowledge in specificsubject areas into a form that provides readers with a comprehensiveunderst<strong>and</strong>ing of each topic: its current state,important new research findings <strong>and</strong> technology, <strong>and</strong> currentissues <strong>and</strong> research needs. Chapter authors are amongthe most prominent HF/E professionals in their respectivesubject areas. Volumes 1–4 are available in print <strong>and</strong> online.Print or online: $75 <strong>HFES</strong> members, $85 nonmembers; Print plus online:$100 <strong>HFES</strong> members, $115 nonmembers; 4-Volume set (print only): $240 members,$255 nonmembersabout current trends in the employment environment for humanfactors/ergonomics professionals. In 20 tables, the report describesmembers' demographic data (region, market sector, degree held/discipline, degree/time in position, years since highest degree, population,<strong>and</strong> employment size), as well as mean total pay by thosesame characteristics.40 pp., 8 1 ⁄2 × 11″, paper ; PDF e-book delivered via e-mail; $50 members,$300 nonmembers <strong>and</strong> institutionssample of readers. Best of <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> servesas a historical resource for HF/E professionals,a compendium of readings for graduate-leveleducation, <strong>and</strong> a means to introduce the fieldof human factors/ergonomics to anyone withan interest in improving the human-systeminterface.580 pp., 8 1 ⁄2 × 11″, paper ; $115 <strong>HFES</strong> members,$125 nonmembers<strong>and</strong> difficult-to-study realities that confront humans as they attemptto interact effectively with complex environments.Quarterly in Spring, Summer, Fall, <strong>and</strong> Winter, 6 × 9″, ~400 pp./year; Onlineonly: $86 <strong>HFES</strong> members, $161 nonmembers, $375 institutions ; Print only: $94<strong>HFES</strong> members, $177 nonmembers, $412 institutions; Online + print: $114 members,$211 nonmembers, $494 institutionsThis comprehensive publication dedicated to formalizing the study<strong>and</strong> practice of augmented cognition pulls together a vast array ofinformation into a single source <strong>and</strong> provides valuable advice onhow to study <strong>and</strong> practice in this field successfully. Covers brain sensors<strong>and</strong> measures; fNIR sensors; sensor integration to characterizeoperator state; cognitive state estimation in mobile environments;a mitigation framework for enhancing situation awareness; methodology,methods, <strong>and</strong> metrics for testing<strong>and</strong> evaluating augmented cognition systems;engineering control system theory inthe behavioral sciences; design platformmethodology for augmented cognition;<strong>and</strong> practical considerations for developingaugmented cognition applications.Includes index.280 pp., 8 1 ⁄2 × 11″, paper; $85 <strong>HFES</strong> members,$100 nonmembersVolume 5 (Fall 20<strong>09</strong>) Contents: Performance in Nursing; <strong>Human</strong><strong>Factors</strong> of Information Visualization; Aviation Automation: GeneralPerspectives <strong>and</strong> Specific Guidance for the Design of Modes <strong>and</strong> Alerts;Intercepting Moving Objects: Fundamental Principles Learned FromBaseball; Expertise: Acquisition, Limitations, <strong>and</strong> Control; Principles forthe Design of Effective Training; Augmented Cognition: An Overview;<strong>Human</strong> Performance Modeling; About the Authors; Index [~300 pp.,6 × 9″, paper]Volume 4 (2008) Contents: Spatial Mental Representation: Implicationsfor Navigation System Design; Digital <strong>Human</strong> Modeling for WorkspaceDesign; Forensic <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong>: People, Places, Products; H<strong>and</strong>heldDigital Devices; Haptic Interaction: Design for Everyday Interfaces; AirTraffic Control; Office <strong>Ergonomics</strong>: A Review of Pertinent Research <strong>and</strong> RecentDevelopments; About the Authors; Index [300 pp., 6 × 9″, paper]To order, go to http://hfes.org/Publications, or contact the <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Ergonomics</strong> Society,P.O. Box 1369, Santa Monica, CA 90406-1369 USA; 310/394-1811, Fax 310/394-2410, store@hfes.org.49


Level TwoCareer Center, Exhibit Hall, <strong>HFES</strong> Central,Internet Café, RegistrationBowieGoliadLone Star BallroomMissionSan JacintoGRAND HYATTSAN ANTONIOMaps <strong>and</strong> Guide toRoom Locations


Level ThreeBonhamIndependencePresidioTravisLevel FourCrockettRepublicSeguinTexas Ballroom


CARLOW1982 – 20<strong>09</strong>Providing <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Factors</strong> Expertiseto Governments <strong>and</strong> Industry Worldwide for27 yearsA21 st Century Contract Research Company of Consultants <strong>and</strong> Teamssolving human performance problemsPrimarily involved in applying <strong>Human</strong> Systems Engineering (HSE) to the acquisitionof complex systems, including definition of the HSE end-to-end process,<strong>and</strong> conduct of specific process steps including analysis of human performancerequirements, design of human-machine interfaces, human performance <strong>and</strong>safety risk reduction, <strong>and</strong> HSE test <strong>and</strong> evaluation.ContactThomas B. Malone, Ph.D., CHFEPPresidentCarlow International Incorporated20856 Waterbeach PlacePotomac Falls, VA 20165(703) 444-4666Fax: (703) 444-5665tbmalone@carlow.comhttp://carlow.cominfo@carlow.com

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