Full Program - Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
Transcription
Full Program - Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
September 19–23, 2016 Washington, D.C., USA HFES International Annual Meeting PR OGR AM HUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIETY Save the Date! At the forefront of patient safety An international symposium that expands your knowledge of human factors/ergonomics applied to health-care devices, environments, and end-users! • Get insights on the latest science and best practices • Understand innovations in the safety of health-care providers and patients • Sharpen the focus of your HF/E initiatives • Improve your regulatory approaches Human Factors and Ergonomics in Health Care March 5–8, 2017 Sheraton New Orleans New Orleans, Louisiana The Health-Care Symposium offers leading human factors experts, pharmaceutical and medical device companies, biomedical engineers, health-care providers, FDA representatives, and patient safety researchers the opportunity to share knowledge and find solutions for issues and challenges in health-care. The symposium has four tracks that concentrate on: • Consumer and Clinical Health-Care IT • Hospital Environments • Medical and Drug-Delivery Devices • Patient Safety Research and Initiatives It also features workshops, presentations, and interactive posters in a format that allows for interaction and exchange among participants and presenters. Keynote Speaker: Rafael Grossmann, MD. A health-care futurist, technology innovator, and surgeon, Grossmann has focused on tapping the paradoxical power of technology to coexist with a better, more humane medical care. He was the first physician to use Google Glass during live surgery and is an advocate of telemedicine, mobile health, and digital medicine. Learn more at bit.ly/2017HealthCareSymposium HUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIET Y G ENERAL INFO RMATI O N Technical Program Committee Chair CHRISTOPHER B. MAYHORN Interactive Sessions Coordinator RONALD L. BORING Student Forum RAEGAN M. HOEFT General Sessions RICK THOMAS Quality ANNE E. ADAMS Workshops NANCY J. STONE Guest Lectures TONYA L. SMITH-JACKSON Technical Group Program Chairs Aerospace Systems MICHELLE E. HARPER-SCIARINI Forensics Professional ALISON G. VREDENBURGH Perception & Performance JASON S. MCCARLEY Aging SHARON M. B. JOINES Health Care JOSEPH R. KEEBLER ANPING XIE Product Design ERIK D. WAKEFIELD Augmented Cognition CHANG S. NAM Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making ROBERT S. PFAFF STEPHEN B. GILBERT Communications HARRY E. BLANCHARD Computer Systems JAY ELKERTON Education HEATHER C. LUM Environmental Design KAREN JACOBS Human Performance Modeling CHRISTOPHER MYERS Individual Differences in Performance KRYSTYNA GIELO-PERCZAK JAMES L. SZALMA Internet JAY ELKERTON ANAND K. GRAMOPADHYE Macroergonomics RICHARD J. HOLDEN Occupational Ergonomics CHRISTOPHER R. REID Safety WILLIAM J. VIGILANTE, JR. Surface Transportation SHAN BAO System Development JEFFREY A. THOMAS Test & Evaluation PAMELA A. SAVAGE-KNEPSHIELD Training CRISTINA L. BYRNE Virtual Environments SHAWN M. DOHERTY Host Committee Featured Sessions ANTHONY D. (TONY) ANDRE Technical Tours Team BRIDGET LEWIS Student Lounge Program LINSEY M. STEEGE (Chair) BRIDGET LEWIS (Cochair) Student Volunteers Coordinators THOMAS M. GABLE (Chair) SARAH E. WILLIAMS (Cochair) GENERAL INFORMATION User Experience Day LARA CHENG i GEN E R A L INF OR M ATI O N Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Officers President WILLIAM S. MARRAS Secretary-Treasurer ROBERT G. RADWIN President-Elect NANCY J. COOKE Secretary-Treasurer-Elect S. CAMILLE PERES Immediate Past President ANDREW S. IMADA Immediate Past Secretary-Treasurer JAMES P. BLISS Executive Council At-Large Members ANN M. BISANTZ PASCALE CARAYON KERMIT G. DAVIS PAUL A. GREEN M. SUSAN HALLBECK DAVID M. REMPEL HFES Division Chairs Internal Affairs JENNIFER RILEY Education CAROLYN M. SOMMERICH Outreach KAREN JACOBS Scientific Communications and Publications C. MELODY CARSWELL Technical Standards ROBERT R. FOX HFES Staff Executive Director LYNN STROTHER Communications Director LOIS SMITH Director of Member Services CARLOS DE FALLA Administrative/Publications Coordinator SUSAN MARSCHNER Senior Production Editor STEVE STAFFORD Member Services Coordinator STEFANIE ALEXANDER 2016 Sustaining Members of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society PLATINUM GOLD SILVER APTIMA, INC. BATTELLE DSO NATIONAL LABS WALDEMAR KARWOWSKI HAYDEE M. CUEVAS HUMANTECH, INC. ii GENERAL INFORMATION G ENERAL INFO RMATI O N Sponsors (As of August 22, 2016) Exhibitors (As of August 22, 2016) Booths 27 AMTI General Sponsorship CRC PRESS Booth 9 BIOPAC Systems, Inc. Tabletop 5 Board of Certification in Professional Ergonomics Mentor-Mentee Lunches HAYDEE M. CUEVAS STATE FARM Booths 11, 12 & 13 CRC Press/Taylor & Francis Group Alphonse Chapanis Best Student Paper Award HFES COUNCIL OF TECHNICAL GROUPS Tabletop 4 Foundation for Professional Ergonomics (FPE) WALDEMAR KARWOWSKI Booth 14 HFES Upcoming Meetings Student Lounge BOARD OF CERTIFICATION IN PROFESSIONAL ERGONOMICS Booth 15 NASA Human Systems Integration Division (Tuesday) Booth 16 Noldus Information Technology Product Design/Health Care Technical Group Networking Reception Booth 18 Penn State Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering Principal Sponsors JOHNS HOPKINS ARMSTRONG INSTITUTE FOR PATIENT SAFETY AND QUALITY Booth 17 SAGE Publishing DEPARTMENT OF INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING, CLEMSON Booth 10 SensoMotoric Instruments, Inc. UNIVERSITY DESIGN SCIENCE Booth 20 Smart Eye MEDSTAR HEALTH – NATIONAL CENTER FOR HUMAN FACTORS IN HEALTHCARE Booth 24 Tobii Pro STARSHIP HEALTH TECHNOLOGIES Tabletop 1 University of Michigan Center for Ergonomics Senior Sponsors BRESSLERGROUP CORE HUMAN FACTORS EVANS INCORPORATED Booths 25 & 26 U.S. Department of Transportation JAY POLLACK CONSULTING Booth 23 Xsens KK WOMEN’S AND CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL USABILITY ASSOCIATES USERWORKS Junior Sponsors END TO END USER RESEARCH UX Day Leadership Development Workshop STATE FARM UX Day Keynote Address STATE FARM GENERAL INFORMATION 1 GEN E R A L INF OR M ATI O N Contents Registration & Facilities Registration & Facilities Meeting Facilities...............................................................2 Registration Counter Location and Hours.......................2 On-Site Event Tickets.........................................................2 Refreshments.....................................................................2 Resources HFES Services....................................................................3 On-Site Career Center.......................................................3 Job Notices at the Annual Meeting..................................3 Internet Café......................................................................3 Internet Access..................................................................3 Message Boards.................................................................3 News and Announcements...............................................3 Follow Us on Twitter @HFES............................................3 Mobile App.........................................................................3 Student Lounge..................................................................3 Audiovisual Preview Room................................................3 Birds of a Feather Room...................................................3 Volunteers Assignment Room..........................................3 Exhibits Location and Hours...........................................................4 Exhibitor List......................................................................4 Prize Drawings in the Exhibit Hall....................................4 Event Highlights Student Career & Professional Development Day..........4 National Ergonomics Month Expo....................................4 Opening Reception............................................................4 Mentor-Mentee Brown Bag Luncheons...........................4 Early-Career Professionals Lunch.....................................4 Special Invited Sessions....................................................4 Posters Reception..............................................................5 HFES Annual Business Meeting.......................................5 User Experience Day..........................................................5 Interactive Demonstration Session..................................5 Fellows Poster Session......................................................5 Student Reception.............................................................5 Early-Career Professionals Reception..............................5 Policies Attendee Badges................................................................5 Photography and Recording Policies...............................5 Cell Phones.........................................................................5 Nonsmoking Policy............................................................5 Proceedings........................................................................5 Meetings HFES Groups......................................................................6 Other Groups......................................................................6 ISO and ANSI Standards Committees..............................6 Technical Groups...............................................................7 Social Events..........................................................................7 Technical Tours......................................................................8 Technical Program Key to Abbreviations Used in This Program....................8 Workshops..........................................................................8 Technical Sessions.............................................................8 Program at a Glance.................................... center spread Author Index.........................................................................44 Personal Planner..................................................................51 Advertisers............................................................................51 Facility Map..........................................................................60 Meeting Facilities All Annual Meeting functions other than technical tours and some networking events will be held in the Washington Hilton unless otherwise noted in the program. A map of the meeting space may be found on page 60. Electronic signage is also available. 2 Registration Counter Location and Hours Registration is open during the following hours in the Concourse Foyer: Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday 3:00−6:00 p.m. 7:00 a.m.−7:00 p.m. 7:00 a.m.−6:00 p.m. 7:30 a.m.−5:30 p.m. 7:30 a.m.−5:00 p.m. 8:00 a.m.−12:00 noon On-Site Event Tickets For those events not sold out or canceled, tickets for tours and social events may be purchased at the Registration Counter during registration hours. No waiting lists will be established; tickets will be sold on a first-come, first-served basis. Refreshments Beverage breaks will take place each morning (10:00–10:30) and afternoon (3:00–3:30) in the following locations: Monday Crystal Ballroom Foyer (Concourse Level) Tuesday morning International Terrace (Terrace Level) Tuesday afternoon International Center (Exhibit Hall, Concourse Level) Wednesday–Thursday International Center (Exhibit Hall, Concourse Level) Friday morning GENERAL INFORMATION Concourse (Concourse Level) & Terrace (Terrace Level) Foyers G ENERAL INFO RMATI O N Resources HFES Services Members of the HFES team will be present in the Concourse (Concourse Level) to provide information on membership, publications, and services. Nonmembers who are registered for the full week are entitled to HFES member prices on publication orders. Career Center The Career Center is located in International East (Concourse Level) and is open during the following hours: Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday 1:00−6:00 p.m. 8:30 a.m.−6:00 p.m. 8:30 a.m.−5:30 p.m. 8:30 a.m.−5:00 p.m. News and Announcements Notifications and news alerts will be sent via the mobile program app and Twitter. Follow Us on Twitter @HFES Check out the Twitter feed @HFES and post at #HFES. Mobile App Download the HFES 2016 Annual Meeting mobile app from Google Play and the App Store. The app provides details about technical sessions, workshops, tours, events, and more. Updates to the program will be provided via push notifications through the mobile program app. Employers who have a current job posting or are registered to search résumés on the HFES Online Career Center may reserve interview booths and/or tables at the On-Site Career Center, subject to availability. If you have not already reserved space, you may sign up at the HFES Services Desk. The scheduling of interviews at the Annual Meeting is the sole responsibility of the employer. HFES members: You may post your résumé in the Online Career Center free of charge. Visit hfes.org and click “Career Center.” Job Notices at the Annual Meeting Companies that wish to post a job in the on-site Career Center, and are not interviewing, may opt to have HFES staff collect résumés and mail them after the meeting. The charge is $150. Student Lounge The Student Lounge, located in the Cabinet room (Concourse Level), has been set aside for students to meet, network, participate in special student activities, and relax. Hours are Tuesday through Thursday, 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Audiovisual Preview Room The Coat room (Terrace Level, Monday−Wednesday) and the Oaklawn room (Lobby Level, Thursday−Friday) has been reserved for presenters who wish to preview their audiovisual materials. Computers will be available for AV preview only. Preview hours are as follows: Monday−Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday 7:00 a.m.−6:00 p.m. 7:30 a.m.−5:30 p.m. 7:30 a.m.−5:00 p.m. 7:30 a.m.−12:00 noon Organizations not interviewing in the Career Center or collecting résumés during the meeting may post a “for information only” job notice at the on-site Career Center for a $75 fee. Job seekers will be directed to send their résumés directly to the organization advertising the position. Birds of a Feather Room The Embassy room (Terrace Level) has been set aside Monday through Thursday from 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. and on Friday from 7:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon for individuals with mutual interests to discuss pertinent topics or conduct meetings. A sign-up sheet is provided at the room for advance reservations. Meeting times are allocated on a first-come, first-served basis. Internet Café Computers with Internet access will be available in the Concourse Foyer. Please limit your time to 10 minutes per session. Volunteers Assignment Room Student volunteers who have been assigned duties should check in with Volunteer Coordinators Thomas Gable and Sarah Williams in the Boundary room (Terrace Level). Internet Access For registered guests, complimentary Internet is available in the Washington Hilton main lobby and the hotel’s TDL Bar. Message Boards A cork message boards will be available in the Concourse Foyer for posting hard-copy messages and announcements about meetings and events. GENERAL INFORMATION 3 GEN E R A L INF OR M ATI O N Exhibits Location and Hours All attendees are encouraged to visit the exhibits, located in International Center (Concourse Level). Refreshment breaks will be held in the Exhibit Hall on Tuesday afternoon and on Wednesday and Thursday morning and afternoon. Exhibition hours are as follows: Tuesday Wednesday Thursday 3:00–6:00 p.m. 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. 10:00 a.m.–3:30 p.m. Exhibitor List The list of exhibitors appears on page 1. Prize Drawings in the Exhibit Hall HFES will be giving away two 2017 membership renewals and two registrations for the 2017 Annual Meeting, to be held in Austin, Texas, October 9–13, 2017. To enter a drawing to win these prizes, fill out the entry slip found in your portfolio bag and deposit it in the appropriate box inside the Exhibit Hall. Drawings will be held on Wednesday and Thursday during both the morning and afternoon refreshment breaks (10:00–10:30 a.m. and 3:00−3:30 p.m.). Names of winners will be posted on a sign board in the Exhibit Hall. You must be present to claim your prize. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 Mentor-Mentee Brown Bag Luncheons (Tuesday−Thursday) A series of mentor-mentee luncheons will be held to assist students and early-career professionals and those in career transition to develop mentoring relationships with established professionals in the HF/E field. These small-group, dynamic, interactive sessions enable students and young professionals to meet in an informal setting and discuss their concerns and interests. The luncheons will be held from 12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday in the Morgan room for those who reserved a space with Haydee Cuevas prior to the meeting. A waiting list will be available at HFES Services near the Registration Counter (Concourse Foyer). Early-Career Professionals Luncheon During this networking lunch on Tuesday from noon to 1:30 p.m. in Columbia 1 (Terrace Level), early-career pro fessionals will have the opportunity to dine and converse with established academic, industry, and government professionals. Attendance is by prior reservation. Special Invited Sessions Tuesday from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. has been set aside for four sessions showcasing guest speakers discussing current topics addressing a broad range of HF/E areas. All rooms are on the Concourse Level. Event Highlights MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 Student Career & Professional Development Day The HFES Student Affairs Committee is pleased to offer a special day devoted to events of interest to students on Monday in Columbia 9 (Terrace Level). See page 9 for a schedule of events. National Ergonomics Month Expo Celebrate National Ergonomics Month! All HFES meeting attendees and their guests are invited to a special 90-minute NEM Expo, to be held on Monday from 4:45 to 6:15 p.m. in the International Terrace (Terrace Level). The Expo will feature several entertaining and interactive booths with live demonstrations illustrating successful human factors/ergonomics outreach activities. Stop by any time during the session to peruse the booths and learn how you can participate in NEM this year. Opening Reception Join friends and colleagues in Heights Courtyard (outdoors, Lobby Level) from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. for this festive kickoff reception. See old friends and meet new ones while you 4 enjoy beverages and hors d’oeuvres. Guest tickets are available to those not attending the annual meeting. All guest tickets must be purchased at the Registration Counter prior to 7:00 p.m. on Monday. Session 1: Automated and Driverless Cars: Separating Myth From Reality. Alain L. Kornhauser (director, Princeton Transportation Program), and others will discuss and debate the human factors issues specific to the proliferation of automated driving and so-called driverless cars on our roads. What issues must we address for safe and successful integration of these technologies and vehicles? The session will take place in International West. Session 2: Deep Space Exploration: New Human Factors Horizons. Former NASA Astronaut Sandra Magnus, Sam Scimemi, director of the International Space Station program, and others will discuss the particular challenges of prolonged space flight and occupation, as well as NASA’s current plan to send astronauts to Mars in the 2030s. This session will be held in Jefferson. Session 3: Human Factors in Cybersecurity. A panel of experts will provide an overview of the unique human factors underpinnings of cybersecurity breaches, the needed human factors agenda to address the rapid growth of cybersecurity GENERAL INFORMATION G ENERAL INFO RMATI O N applications (e.g., hospital medical records, government data, driverless cars, smart appliances), and the current funding opportunities in this area. Panelists include Peter Hancock (University of Central Florida), David Schuster (San Jose State University), Ben Sawyer (MIT), and others to be announced. The session will be held in Monroe. Session 4: HFES Journal Awards Showcase. This session will feature presentations by recipients of the Human Factors Prize and best paper awards for Human Factors, Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making, and Ergonomics in Design. This session will take place in Lincoln West. Posters Reception All technical and university lab posters will be presented in a dedicated session on Tuesday from 5:00 to 6:30 p.m. in the Exhibit Hall (International Center, Concourse Level). HFES Annual Business Meeting The Business Meeting will be held on Tuesday from 6:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. in Columbia 9 (Terrace Level). WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 User Experience Day User Experience Day is a dedicated track of programming specifically geared for user experience professionals. The event will take place on Wednesday from 8:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. in various locations. See http://userexperiencedayhfes.com for a summary of the day’s activities. Interactive Demonstration Session Five interactive demonstrations will be presented in the Exhibit Hall (International Center, Concourse Level) on Wednesday from 8:30 to 10:00 a.m. The presenters will repeat their demonstrations as attendees move from one demo to the next throughout the 90-minute session. years following graduation who are working in industry and academia. In addition to networking with one another and with prominent HFES members, a short program will target specific topics of interest to early-career professionals Policies Attendee Badges All persons attending workshops, technical sessions, exhibits, tours, receptions, and other events must wear their registration badges. Attendees may register for Annual Meeting events at the Registration Counter (Concourse Foyer). Photography and Recording Policies Attendees may take photos and/or make audio or video recordings of speakers or their visual aids, or exhibitors and their displays, only with permission from HFES and the speakers or exhibitors. Permission forms are available at HFES Services near the Registration Counter. Please complete a form for each presentation you wish to record, obtain the speaker(s)’ signature(s), and return it to HFES Services. HFES reserves the right to use photographs of attendees for promotional purposes. If you do not want HFES to use your photo, please send an opt-out message to Lois Smith at [email protected]. Cell Phones Please mute mobile devices (cell phones, tablets, etc.) while attending sessions. Nonsmoking Policy Smoking is not permitted inside the Washington Hilton or on technical tours. Fellows Poster Session HFES Fellows will once again display posters of some of their latest work. The session will be held on Wednesday from 10:00 to 11:00 a.m. in the Exhibit Hall (International Center, Concourse Level). Proceedings All registered attendees have been provided with a flash drive containing the proceedings. Those who reserved a CD-ROM at registration will be provided with a disc. Student Reception All students attending the Annual Meeting are invited to a reception on Wednesday from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. in the International Terrace (Terrace Level). Snacks, beverages, and a no-host bar will be provided, and student awards will be presented. A computer and printer are located at the Internet Café (Concourse Foyer) for attendees who wish to print papers from the proceedings. For printing needs not associated with obtaining printouts of papers from the proceedings, visit the Business Center, located on the Terrace Level, across from the Embassy room. Early-Career Professionals Reception If you indicated at registration that you would attend this event, join your early-career colleagues in the Gunston room (Terrace Level) on Wednesday from 5:30 to 7:00 p.m. The reception is intended for professionals in their first five Annual Meeting proceedings papers are also available free to HFES members via SAGE Journals Online. To access the content, log in at http://hfes.org with your user name and password and select the appropriate link on the Welcome page. GENERAL INFORMATION 5 ME E T ING S HFES Groups All meetings are on the Terrace Level. SUNDAY−MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18−19 HFES Executive Council 7:30 a.m.–6:00 p.m. Gunston Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making Editorial Board (Lunch) 12:00 noon–1:15 p.m. Albright ISO and ANSI Standards Committees FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 All meetings are on the Terrace Level. Education Division (Breakfast) 7:00−8:00 a.m. Embassy TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 Human Factors Editorial Board (Lunch) 12:00 noon–1:15 p.m. Gunston East Local Chapter Presidents (Lunch) 12:00 noon–1:15 p.m. Gunston West Technical Program Committee (Breakfast) 8:15–10:15 a.m. Du Pont Other Groups All meetings are on the Terrace Level. HFES Annual Business Meeting 6:30–7:00 p.m. Columbia 9 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 HFES Scientific Publications Committee (Breakfast) 7:15–8:15 a.m. Albright Outreach Division 7:30–8:30 a.m. Embassy Ergonomics in Design Editorial Board (Lunch) 12:00 noon–1:15 p.m. Albright Student Chapter Presidents (Lunch) 12:00 noon–1:15 p.m. Cardozo WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 ANSI/HFES 100 8:30−10:00 a.m. Albright Technical Standards Division 3:00–4:00 p.m. Albright MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 Foundation for Professional Ergonomics 8:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m. Du Pont TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 Board of Certification in Professional Ergonomics Reception 6:30–7:30 p.m. Gunston WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 SAE International G45 Human Systems Integration Committee Meeting 1:00–5:00 p.m. Du Pont THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 / SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24 Education & Training Committee (Breakfast) 7:00–8:15 a.m. Albright Board of Certification in Professional Ergonomics Business Meeting 7:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Albright 6 U.S. TAG to ISO/TC 159/SC4 10:30−11:30 a.m. Albright MEETINGS U.S. TAG to ISO/TC 159/SC3 4:00–5:00 p.m. Albright MEETI N GS Technical Groups MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 Council of Technical Groups 3:30−5:00 p.m. Georgetown East (Concourse Level) Forensics Professional (Reception) 4:30−5:30 p.m. Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Health Care (Reception) 5:30−6:30 p.m. Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 Human Performance Modeling 5:30−6:30 p.m. Fairchild (Terrace Level) Training 6:30−7:30 p.m. Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Individual Differences in Performance 3:30−4:30 p.m. Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Product Design (Reception) 7:00−9:00 p.m. Bistro Bistro (Off site) Internet / Computer Systems 4:30−5:30 p.m. Lincoln West (Concourse Level) WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 Macroergonomics / Environmental Design (Reception) 3:45−5:00 p.m. Fairchild (Terrace Level) Aerospace Systems (Reception) 3:30−5:30 p.m. Jefferson West (Concourse Level) Aging (Lunch) 12:00−1:30 p.m. Gunston West (Terrace Level) Augmented Cognition 3:30−5:15 p.m. Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making (Reception) 3:30−5:15 p.m. Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Communications 3:30−4:30 p.m. Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Computer Systems / Internet 4:30−5:30 p.m. Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Education (Breakfast) 7:00−8:30 a.m. Gunston East (Terrace Level) Environmental Design / Macroergonomics (Reception) 3:45−5:00 p.m. Fairchild (Terrace Level) Occupational Ergonomics 4:30−6:00 p.m. Off site THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 Technical Group Program Chairs 5:15–6:30 p.m. Albright (Terrace Level) Social Events MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 Opening Reception 6:30–9:30 p.m. Heights Courtyard (outdoors, Lobby Level) WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 Early-Career Professionals Reception 5:30–7:00 p.m. Gunston (Terrace Level) Student Reception 5:30–6:30 p.m. International Terrace (Terrace Level) Perception & Performance 4:00−6:00 p.m. Georgetown East (Concourse Level) Product Design 3:30−4:30 p.m. (Business Meeting) Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Safety 5:30−6:30 p.m. Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Surface Transportation (Reception) 5:30−9:30 p.m. Off site System Development (Lunch) 12:00−1:30 p.m. Off site Test & Evaluation 5:30−6:30 p.m. Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Virtual Environments 3:00−4:00 p.m. Georgetown East (Concourse Level) MEETINGS 7 TECHNIC A L PR OGR A M Technical Tours Technical Program Buses will begin loading on T Street, outside the doors on the Terrace Level 15 minutes prior to the departure times listed below. Tickets for events not sold out may be purchased at the Registration Counter. Tickets must be presented when buses are loading. At press time, the following workshops were scheduled to take place. However, check the mobile program app for updates. At press time, the following tours were scheduled to take place; however, please check the mobile program app and the poster boards in the registration area for updates about canceled events. Tours with low attendance are subject to cancellation. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 Tour T1 − George Mason University Labs − The Arch Lab 9:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Tour T2 − Federal Highway Administration Turner-Fairbank Highway Research Center, Human Factors Lab 12:00 noon–3:30 p.m. (Lunch included) Tour T3 − U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission National Product Testing and Evaluation Center 12:00 noon–4:00 p.m. (Lunch included) THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 Tour T4 − U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission National Product Testing and Evaluation Center 12:00 noon–4:00 p.m. (Lunch included) Tour T5 − U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission 1:00–5:00 p.m. Tour T6 − MedStar − National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare 1:45–5:30 p.m. Monday, September 19 8:30 a.m.−12:00 noon MORNING WORKSHOP WK1 – Designing and Doing HF/E Fieldwork in Home and Community Settings Richard J. Holden, Indiana U.; Rupa S. Valdez, U. of Virginia Monday, September 19, 8:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Monday, September 19 1:30−5:00 p.m. AFTERNOON WORKSHOPS WK3 – Risk Management Workshop for HF/E Practitioners George Samaras and Elizabeth Averill Samaras, Samaras & Assoc., Inc. Monday, September 19, 1:30–5:00 p.m. Lincoln East (Concourse Level) WK4 – Cogulator: Introduction to Simple Workload Models Using Cogulator Steven Estes, MITRE Corp. Monday, September 19, 1:30–5:00 p.m. Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Key to Abbreviations Used in This Program AS Aerospace Systems AAging AC Augmented Cognition CE Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making CCommunications CS Computer Systems DEMDemonstrations EEducation ED Environmental Design FP Forensics Professional 8 GS General Sessions HC Health Care HP Human Performance Modeling ID Individual Differences in Performance IInternet MEMacroergonomics OE Occupational Ergonomics (formerly Industrial Ergonomics) PL Plenary Session PP Perception & Performance TECHNICAL PROGRAM PD Product Design POS Interactive Posters SSafety SS Special Sessions SF Student Forum ST Surface Transportation SD System Development TE Test & Evaluation TTraining VE Virtual Environments WKWorkshops M ONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 9 WK5 – Teaching Insights and Success in Academia for Pretenure and Potential Academics Nicholas J. Kelling, U. of Houston-Clear Lake; Heather C. Lum, Penn State Erie, The Behrend College; Anne Collins McLaughlin, North Carolina State U.; Michael Bartha and Christy Harper, Hewlett Packard; S. Camille Peres, Texas A&M U.; Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central Florida; Andrew Muddimer, Workplace Sense Monday, September 19, 1:30–5:00 p.m. Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Monday, September 19 9:00 a.m.−4:30 p.m. ALL-DAY WORKSHOPS WK6 – ShadowBox Approach to Cognitive Skills Training Gary Klein, MacroCognition LLC; Laura Militello, Applied Decision Science, LLC Monday, September 19, 9:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m. Jefferson West (Concourse Level) WK7 – Human-Systems Integration Workshop Lawrence G. Shattuck and Nita Lewis Shattuck, Naval Postgraduate School Monday, September 19, 9:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m. Monroe (Concourse Level) Monday, September 19 10:30 a.m.−5:00 p.m. SF1 – Student Career and Professional Development Day 1:30–2:45 p.m. Session 2: Building a Better Network Through Speed Networking Chair: Bridget Lewis, George Mason U. Speed networking is an increasingly popular activity that is a way to enhance the networking experience at professional events. Whether you have a position to fill, are trying to find a job, are looking to collaborate, or just want to meet new people in the HF/E community, speed networking during Career Day will be a fun and simple way to enlarge your professional network. During this session we will offer tips for successful networking and then engage the audience in speed networking. 3:30–5:00 p.m. Session 3: Teaching Excellence and Fostering Industry — Academic Collaborations (a joint session with the workshop, “Teaching Insights and Success in Academia”) This session will focus on techniques to develop collaborations between academia and industry, including industry grants and direct research. Presenters include academics and those in industry with successful experiences in such collaborations. The session will also address best practices and lessons learned for achieving excellence in teaching. HFES Fitts Education Award winners will lead small-group discussions about their general teaching tips and how to maintain a passion for teaching throughout your career. Monday, September 19 4:45–6:15 p.m. SS1 – National Ergonomics Month Expo SPECIAL SESSIONS Monday, September 19, 4:45–6:15 p.m. International Terrace (Terrace Level) STUDENT AFFAIRS COMMITTEE Monday, September 19, 10:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel/Alternate Format 10:30–11:45 a.m. Session 1: Mentors and Mentees Chair: Farzan Sasangohar, Texas A&M U. Panelists: Ryan McKendrick, Northrop Grumman; Wendy Baccus, George Mason U.; Haydee Cuevas, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; Christy Harper, HP The relationship between an academic or professional mentor and a mentee is a complicated, special, and extremely important one to understand and nurture. During this session, a panel of speakers from all stages of their academic or professional careers will discuss the importance of mentorship, from the perspectives of both mentors and mentees. Monday, September 19 6:30–9:30 p.m. Opening Reception 6:30–9:30 p.m. Heights Courtyard (Lobby Level) MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19 9 TUE SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 0 Tuesday, September 20 8:00−10:00 a.m. PL1 – Opening Plenary Session Tuesday, September 20, 8:00–10:00 a.m. International Center (Concourse Level) Plenary The Opening Plenary session features the presidential address by William S. Marras, “RELEVANCE: Where Are We Going, Anyway?”; the keynote address, “Caution: This Machine Operated by Humans,” by Norman R. Augustine; and the presentation of newly elected Fellows and Society-wide awards. Also on view will be the winning videos from the HFES YouTube Video Contest. The Human Factors Prize and awards for best papers published in HFES journals will be presented in Special Invited Session 4: HFES Journal Awards Showcase, on Tuesday from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. in the Lincoln West room. Tuesday, September 20 10:30 a.m.−12:00 noon AS1 – Air Traffic Management Problems and Solutions AEROSPACE SYSTEMS Tuesday, September 20, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Lee Sciarini, Naval Postgraduate School; Cochair: Angelia Sebok, Alion Science & Technology Corp. 1. Jennifer Ludvigsen, Steven Estes, and John Helleberg, MITRE Corp., Evaluation of Flight Deck Procedures Used in the Designation of Traffic for Tailored Collision Avoidance Logic 2. Kelly A. Burke and David J. Wing, NASA Langley Research Center; Mark Haynes, Advanced Aerospace Solutions, Flight Test Assessments of Pilot Workload, System Usability, and Situation Awareness of TASAR 3. Alicia Fernandes and Juan Rebollo, Mosaic ATM, Inc., An Oceanic Trajectory-Based Operations Concept Shaped by Operational Influences 4. Christopher D. Wickens, Angelia Sebok, Patricia McCormick, and Brett Walters, Alion Science & Technology, Field-of-View Issues on the Flight Deck: Meta-Analyses to Examine the Effects of Eccentricity, Salience, and Expectancy on Detection and Discrimination 10 C1 – Improving Communication Systems COMMUNICATIONS; COSPONSORED BY COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Tuesday, September 20, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Harry E. Blanchard, AT&T 1. Jessica Parker and Christopher Best, Defence Science and Technology Group; Gregory J. Funke and Adam J. Strang, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Kaye Marion, Royal Melbourne Inst. of Technology, An Investigation of Coding Schemes for Sample Entropy Analysis of Communications Data 2. Kimberly C. Preusse and Christina Gipson, Georgia Tech, Dispatching Information in 911 Teams: A Case Study 3. Mustafa Demir, Nathan J. McNeese, and Nancy J. Cooke, Arizona State U.; Christopher Myers, U.S. Air Force Research Lab, The Synthetic Teammate as a Team Player in Command-and-Control Teams CS1/I – GoodGovUX: Improving the User Experience of Federal Government Digital Products Through Public-Private Collaboration COMPUTER SYSTEMS; COSPONSORED BY INTERNET Tuesday, September 20, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Monroe (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Keith Deaven, Mediabarn, Inc.; Cochair: Jay Elkerton, Emerson Process Management Panelists: Margo Kabel, UserWorks, Inc.; Norm Sun, Excella Consulting; Jeff Pass, Aquilent; Jason Stoner, MetroStar Systems; Emily Gartland, U.S. General Services Admin. GS1 – Recent Trends in Human-Systems Integration GENERAL SESSIONS Tuesday, September 20, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: William Kosnik, U.S. Air Force Research Lab Panelists: John Plaga, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Frank C. Lacson, Pacific Science and Engineering Group; Jeffrey Thomas, U.S. Army Research Lab; Mihriban Whitmore, NASA Johnson Space Center TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 T UESDAY, SEP TEMBER 2 0 ME1 – Conceptualizing Sociotechnical System Boundaries in Health-Care Settings: Within and Across Teams, Organizations, Processes, and Networks MACROERGONOMICS Tuesday, September 20, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Columbia 12 (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Nicole Werner, U. of Wisconsin, Madison Panelists: Anping Xie, Johns Hopkins U.; Ayse P. Gurses, Johns Hopkins U.; Ann Schoofs Hundt and Linsey Steege, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Rupa S. Valdez, U. of Virginia OE1 – Research to Practice to Research – Part 1: Practitioner’s Perspective OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS Tuesday, September 20, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Alternative Format Chair: Christopher R. Reid, Boeing; Cochair: David Rempel, U. of California, Berkeley 1. Carisa Harris Adamson, U. of California, San Francisco; Emma Lam, Stephen Hill, and Andrew Smith, Samuel Merritt U., Evaluation of Hotel Bed Making While Using a Mattress Lift Tool and a Fitted Sheet 2. Gwendolyn Malone and Ryan Porto, General Motors Co., General Motors Global Ergonomic Manufacturing Engineering Process 3. Christopher R. Reid, Boeing Co.; David Rempel, U. of California, Berkeley; Richard Gardner, Boeing Co.; Sheree L. Gibson, Ergonomics Applications; Patrick G. Dempsey, National Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health; Cindy Whitehead, U.S. Naval Surface Warfare Center, Research to Practice to Research: Part 1 – A Practitioner’s Perspective PP1 – Elements of Human Performance PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE Tuesday, September 20, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Jefferson West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Erin Alves, Honeywell; Cochair: Ben D. Lawson, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Lab 1. Benjamin Sheffield, U.S. Army Public Health Center; Douglas S. Brungart and Amy Blank, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, The Effects of Hearing Impairment on Fire Team Performance in Dismounted Combat 2. Ben D. Lawson, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Lab; Bethany M. Ranes, Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation; Linda-Brooke I. Thompson, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Lab, Smooth Moves: Shooting Performance Is Related to Efficiency of Rifle Movement 3. Martin G. Helander and Halimahtun M. Khalid, Damai Sciences, Analysis of Disaster Risk Attitudes in Situation Awareness: A Cultural and Gender Perspective 4. Juan Luis Hernandez-Arellano, Universidad Autónoma de Ciudad Juarez; Maury A. Nussbaum, Virginia Tech; Jorge Luis Garcia-Alcaraz, Universidad Autónoma de Ciudad Juarez, Workload and Fatigue Among Assembly Operators: A Structural Equation Modeling Approach 5. Youngbo Suh and Thomas K. Ferris, Texas A&M U., The Impacts of Touchscreen and Physical Control Interface Characteristics on Driver Distraction and Attention Management S1 – Safety Culture and System Safety SAFETY Tuesday, September 20, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon International West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Mahiyar Nasarwanji, National Inst. of Occupational Safety and Health; Cochair: Barry Strauch, National Transportation Safety Board 1. Chris Langer, CIRAS, Improving Safety Culture With Confidential Reporting 2. Kari Kallinen, Finnish Defence Research Agency, A Good Safety Culture Correlates With Increased Positive and Decreased Negative Outcomes: A Questionnaire-Based Study at Finnish Defense Forces 3. Morgan J. Tear and Tom W. Reader, London School of Economics and Political Science; Steven Shorrock and Barry Kirwan, EUROCONTROL, Divergent Perceptions of Safety Culture Between Occupational Groups: The Role of National Culture 4. Kelly J. Neville, U.S. Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division; Sarah Sherwood, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; John “Bam Bam” Mooney and Derek “Baffle” Ashlock, BGI, LLC; Angus L. M. Thom McLean III, Rockwell Collins; Melissa Walwanis, U.S. Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division; Amy Bolton, U.S. Office of Naval Research, An Assessment of a Complex Training System’s Resilience to Change Associated With the Introduction of the Live-VirtualConstructive Training Paradigm 5. Mark Sean Avnet, Texas A&M U.; Tonya L. Smith-Jackson, North Carolina A&T State U., Human Error in Context: A Multilevel Framework of System Safety TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 11 TUE SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 0 SD1 – Development and Design in Test and Evaluation TE1 – Evaluating Human-System Interaction TEST AND EVALUATION; COSPONSORED BY SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT Tuesday, September 20, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Petra Alfred, Pacific Science and Engineering Group; Cochair: Pamela Savage-Knepshield, U.S. Army Research Lab 1. Daniel J. Colombo, Lisa Chavez, and Melissa Weaver, BCI, Inc., Human-Factoring a Military Quick Reference Guide (QRG): A Three-Step Methodology 2. Kimberly F. Jackson, Zahar Prasov, Emily Vincent, and Eric M. Jones, Draper, A Heuristic-Based Framework for Improving Design of Unmanned Systems by Quantifying and Assessing Operator Trust 3. Ronald L. Boring, Idaho National Lab; Roger Lew and Thomas A. Ulrich, U. of Idaho, Epistemiation: An Approach for Knowledge Elicitation of Expert Users During Product Design 4. Kimberly Stowers, U. of Central Florida; Nicholas Kasdaglis, Florida Inst. of Technology; Olivia Newton, Shan Lakhmani, and Ryan W. Wohleber, U. of Central Florida; Jessie Y. C. Chen, U.S. Army Research Lab, Intelligent Agent Transparency: The Design and Evaluation of an Interface to Facilitate Human and Intelligent Agent Collaboration T1 – Research Advances in Training Teams, Students, and Drivers TRAINING Tuesday, September 20, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Georgetown East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Linda Pierce, Federal Aviation Admin. 1. Desmond Bonner, Stephen Gilbert, Michael C. Dorneich, Joseph Holub, and Eliot Winer, Iowa State U.; Anne M. Sinatra, U.S. Army Research Lab; Anna Slavina and Anastacia MacAllister, Iowa State U., The Challenges of Building Intelligent Tutoring Systems for Teams 2. Ronald Stevens, U of California, Los Angeles; Trysha Galloway, The Learning Chameleon, Inc.; Ann Williemsen-Dunlap, JUMP Simulation & Education Center, Intermediate Neurodynamic Representations: A Pathway Toward Quantitative Measurements of Teamwork? 3. Thomas A. Stokes, Douglas J. Gillan, and Jeffery P. Braden, North Carolina State U., Establishing the Link Between Usability and Student Satisfaction in Adaptive Online Learning 4. Oleksandra Krasnova, Brett Molesworth, and Ann Williamson, U. of New South Wales, Understanding the Effect of Feedback on Young Drivers’ Speeding Behavior 5. Tingru Zhang, U. of Massachusetts-Amherst; Jinzheng Li and Hugh Thai, Arbella Insurance; Tracy Zafian, Siby Samuel, and Donald L. Fisher, U. of MassachusettsAmherst, Evaluation of the Effect of a Novice Driver Training Program on Citations and Crashes 12 Tuesday, September 20, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: David Hullinger, U.S. Army Research Lab; Cochair: Rachel Lund, U.S. Naval Systems Warfare Center Dahlgren Div. 1. Moritz Körber, Jonas Radlmayr, and Klaus Bengler, Technical U. of Munich, Bayesian Highest Density Intervals of Take-Over Times for Highly Automated Driving in Different Traffic Densities 2. Mark Chignell, Diba Kaya, and Leon Zucherman, U. of Toronto; Jie Jiang, TELUS Communications Co., Assessment of Technical Quality of Online Video Using Visualization in Place of Experience 3. Yevgeniy B. Sirotin and Jacob A. Hasselgren, Scitor, an SAIC Co.; Arun Vemury, DHS Science and Technology Directorate, Usability of Biometric Iris-Capture Methods in Self-Service Applications 4. Anna Feldhütter, Christian Gold, Adrian Hüger, and Klaus Bengler, Technical U. of Munich, Trust in Automation as a Matter of Media Influence and Experience of Automated Vehicles 5. Seyed M. Miran, Chen Ling, and Joseph J. James, U. of Akron; Lans Rothfusz, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Admin., Comparing Effectiveness of Four Graphical Designs for Probabilistic Hazard Information for Tornado Threat VE1 – Me and My VE VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS Tuesday, September 20, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Fairchild (Terrace Level) Alternative Format Chair: Laura Strater, Raytheon IIS Presenters: Christina M. Frederick, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; Monifa Vaughn-Cooke, U. of Maryland; James P. Bliss, Old Dominion U.; Smruti Shah, Old Dominion U. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 T UESDAY, SEP TEMBER 2 0 Tuesday, September 20 1:30−3:00 p.m. A1 – Aging AGING Tuesday, September 20, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Fairchild (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Sharon Joines, North Carolina State U. 1. Joseph Sharit, Jessica Taha, Ronald W. Berkowsky, and Sara J. Czaja, U. of Miami, Seeking and Resolving Complex Online Health Information: Age Differences in the Role of Cognitive Abilities 2. Anne C. Grego-Nagel and Malgorzata J. Rys, Kansas State U., Exploring the Adoption of Telecommunication Services by Older Adults 3. Hagai Tapiro, Avinoam Borowsky, Tal Oron-Gilad, and Yisrael Parmet, Ben-Gurion U. of the Negev, Where Do Older Pedestrians Glance Before Deciding to Cross a Simulated Two-Lane Road? A Pedestrian Simulator Paradigm 4. Ben D. Sawyer, Joonbum Lee, Jonathan Dobres, Bruce Mehler, Joseph F. Coughlin, and Bryan Reimer, Massachusetts Inst. of Technology, Effects of a Voice Interface on Mirror Check Decrements in Older and Younger Multitasking Drivers GS2 – Board on Human-Systems Integration Panel – Human Factors and the Federal Government: Improving Human Performance in Forensic Sciences GENERAL SESSIONS Tuesday, September 20, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Poornima Madhavan, National Academy of Sciences Panelists: Fay Lomax Cook, National Science Foundation; Melissa Taylor, National Inst. of Standards and Technology; Jonathan McGrath, U.S. Department of Justice; Deborah A. Boehm-Davis, George Mason U. 2. Spencer C. Kohn, Ewart J. de Visser, and Gershon Weltman, Perceptronics Solutions, Inc.; Nichole Bosson and Marianne Gausche-Hill, Los Angeles County EMS Agency; Ross Donaldson, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Emergency Medical Team Coordination in Mass Casualty Incidents: A Study of the Los Angeles Emergency Medical System 3. Yaqiong Li, Pascale Carayon, Ann Schoofs Hundt, and Peter Hoonakker, U. of Wisconsin-Madison, Team Interactions and Health IT Use During Hospital Multidisciplinary Rounds 4. Agnes Fagerlund, Human Factors; Joseph R. Keebler, Victoria Lew, Elizabeth H. Lazzara, and Kristen Welsh, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U., Team Performance Framework During Handoffs HP1 – Workload HUMAN PERFORMANCE MODELING Tuesday, September 20, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Monroe (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Joseph Houpt, Wright-State U. 1. Alexander J. Stimpson, Duke U.; Jason C. Ryan, Aurora Flight Sciences; Mary L. Cummings, Duke U., Assessing Pilot Workload in Single-Pilot Operations With Advanced Autonomy 2. Kelene A. Fercho, Doug Peterson, and Lee A. Baugh, U. of South Dakota, A Rested Development: Effort Regulation Strategy Maintains Task Performance but Alters ERPs in Task-Induced Cognitive Fatigue 3. Carolina Rodriguez-Paras, Shiyan Yang, and Thomas K. Ferris, Texas A&M U., Using Pupillometry to Indicate the Cognitive Redline 4. Jung Hyup Kim, Xiaonan Yang, and Monika Putri, U. of Missouri, Multitasking Performance and Workload During a Continuous-Monitoring Task 5. Wenbi Wang, Defence Research and Development Canada, Development of a Baseline Workload Model for Future Submarine Sonar Crewing Analysis OE2 – Research to Practice to Research: Part 2 – An Academic’s Perspective HC1 – Teams in Health Care HEALTH CARE; COSPONSORED BY MACROERGONOMICS Tuesday, September 20, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Joseph R. Keebler, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; Cochair: Victoria Lew, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U. 1. Judith Tiferes, Ann M. Bisantz, Matthew L. Bolton, D. Jeffery Higginbotham, Ryan P. O’Hara, and Nicole K. Wawrzyniak, U. at Buffalo, SUNY; Justen D. Kozlowski, Roswell Park Cancer Inst.; Basel Ahmad, U. at Buffalo, SUNY; Ahmed A. Hussein and Khurshid A. Guru, Roswell Park Cancer Inst., Multimodal Team Interactions in Robot-Assisted Surgery OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS; COSPONSORED BY TRAINING Tuesday, September 20, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: William S. Marras, Ohio State U.; Cochair: Christopher R. Reid, Boeing Co. Panelists: David Rempel, U. of California, Berkeley; James G. Borchardt, Construction Ergonomics, LLC; Sang D. Choi, U. of Wisconsin-Whitewater; Hector Silva, Chevron; Fadi Fathallah and Victor Duraj, U. of California, Davis; Michelle M. Robertson, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for Safety; Donald Goddard, U.S. Army Public Health Center TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 13 TUE SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 0 PD1 – Presentation of the Stanley H. Caplan User-Centered Product Design Award SD2 – Informing System Design With Modeling and Simulation PRODUCT DESIGN SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT Tuesday, September 20, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Alternative Format Chair: Stanley Caplan, Usability Assoc., LLC; Cochair: Dianne McMullin, Boeing Co. Award will be presented to the 2016 recipient, followed by a presentation on the winning product. Tuesday, September 20, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Frank Lacson, Pacific Science & Engineering Group; Cochair: Holly Handley, Old Dominion U. 1. Holly A. H. Handley, Matthew Amissah, and Cansu Kandemir, Old Dominion U., Levels of SysML Compatibility for Collaborative Human System Development 2. Philip S. E. Farrell, Defence Research and Development Canada; David W. Tack, Edward T. Nakaza, and Jordan Bray-Miners, HumanSystems, Inc., Helicopter Aircrew Cumulative Neck Loads From Integrated Task and Physical Demands Analyses 3. Heejin Jeong and Yili Liu, U. of Michigan, Computational Modeling of Finger-Swipe Gestures on Touchscreen: Application of Fitts’ Law in 3-D Space 4. Jessica Cruit and Beth L. Blickensderfer, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; Angus L. M. Thom McLean III, Rockwell Collins; Sarah Sherwood and Taylor Martin, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; Kelly J. Neville and Melissa Walwanis, U.S. Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division; Amy Bolton, U.S. Office of Naval Research, Analyzing Past Mishaps to Explore Safety Considerations Within a Live-Virtual-Constructive Environment PP2 – Auditory and Multimodal Displays PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE Tuesday, September 20, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Jefferson West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Jason McCarley, Flinders U. 1. Myounghoon (Philart) Jeon, Michigan Technological U., How Is Nonverbal Auditory Information Processed? Revisiting Existing Models and Proposing a Preliminary Model 2. Edin Sabic and Jing Chen, New Mexico State U., Threshold of Spearcon Recognition for Auditory Menus 3. Clayton D. Rothwell, Infoscitex Corp.; Griffin D. Romigh, Brian D. Simpson, and Eric R. Thompson, U.S. Air Force Research Lab, The Use of Individualized Voices for Multi-Agent Speech Displays 4. Brandon Pitts and Nadine Sarter, U. of Michigan, Two Is Company, Three Is a Crowd: Age-Related Differences in Processing Concurrent Visual, Auditory, and Tactile Cues 5. Amit Barde, HIT Lab NZ; Matthew Ward and William S. Helton, U. of Canterbury; Mark Billinghurst, U. of South Australia; Gun Lee, HIT Lab NZ, Attention Redirection Using Binaurally Spatialized Cues Delivered Over a Bone-Conduction Headset S2 – Warning Signs and Labels SAFETY Tuesday, September 20, 1:30–3:00 p.m. International West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Katie Berry, Fort Hill Group; Cochair: Raymond Lim, Pierce College 1. Michael J. Kalsher, William G. Obenauer, and Christopher F. Weiss, Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst., Evaluating ANSI Z535-Formatted Warning Labels as an Integrative System 2. Mila Sugovic, Ismail Nooraddini, and Bohdana Sherehiy, EurekaFacts, LLC, Evaluation of Safety Label Design: Comparison Between Cognitive Interviewing Versus Focus Group Methods 3. John Grishin, Michael S. Wogalter, and Will Walkington, North Carolina State U., Improving Food Labels for Health and Safety: Effects of Ingredients List Placement on Search Times 4. Mayuko Ueda, Kazushige Wada, and Yohei Morimoto, West Japan Railway Company; Shinnosuke Usui, Osaka U., The Designs of Warning Signs Changes Drivers’ Behavior 14 ST1 – Automation and Behavior Measures SURFACE TRANSPORTATION Tuesday, September 20, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Columbia 12 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Anuj Pradhan, U. of Michigan Transportation Research Inst.; Cochair: Liza Josias, American Insts. for Research 1. Stacy A. Balk and Steven Jackson, Leidos; Brian H. Philips, U.S. Federal Highway Admin., Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control and Driver Merge Type 2. Wesley J. Kumfer, Samuel J. Levulis, Megan D. Olson, and Richard A. Burgess, Texas Tech U., A Human Factors Perspective on Ethical Concerns of Vehicle Automation 3. David Miller, Mishel Johns, and Brian Mok, Stanford U.; Nikhil Gowda, Renault North America; David Sirkin, Key Lee, and Wendy Ju, Stanford U., Behavioral Measurement of Trust in Automation: The Trust Fall 4. Kelly Funkhouser and Frank Drews, U. of Utah, Putting the Brakes on Autonomous Vehicle Control: Responding to System Breakdowns 5. Kelly Funkhouser and Frank Drews, U. of Utah, Reaction Times When Switching From Autonomous to Manual Driving Control: A Pilot Investigation 6. Asaf Degani, Claudia V. Goldman, Omer Deutsch, and Omer Tsimhoni, General Motors Co., On Sensitivity and Holding in Automotive Systems: The Case of the Climate Control System TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 T UESDAY, SEP TEMBER 2 0 T2 – Live, Virtual and Constructive Training Fidelity (LVC TF) Special Session TRAINING Tuesday, September 20, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Georgetown East (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Katherine P. Tucker, Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division Panelists: Amy Bolton, U.S. Office of Naval Research; Heather Priest, U.S. Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division; Angus L. M. Thom McLean III, Rockwell Collins; Jeff Beaubien, Webb Stacy, and Sterling Wiggins, Aptima Inc.; Robert Wray, SoarTech; John Mooney, BGI, LLC TE2 – Assessing the User Experience TEST AND EVALUATION; COSPONSORED BY SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT; TRAINING Tuesday, September 20, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Kelly Neville, U..S Army Research Lab; Cochair: Julia Wright, U.S. Navy 1. Verena C. Knott, Alexander Wiest, and Klaus Bengler, Technical U. of Munich, Repetitive Lifting Tasks in Logistics – Effects on Humans at Different Lifting Task Durations 2. Yogeeta Desai, Steven Jiang, and Lauren Davis, North Carolina A&T State U., Evaluation of Dashboard Inter activity for a Local Foodbank 3. Jay A. McNamara, Hyeg Joo Choi, Stephanie A. T. Brown, Edward R. Hennessy, and K. Blake Mitchell, U.S. Army Natick Soldier Research, Development, & Engineering Center, Evaluating the Effects of Clothing and Individual Equipment on Marksmanship Performance Using a Novel Five-Target Methodology 4. Breanna Janae Goring, MITRE Corp.; Kadon A.-K. Kyte, Boeing Co.; Rafael N. Patrick, North Carolina A&T State U.; Jason P. Kring, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U., Com parative Evaluation of Bone Conduction Communication Device on Speech Intelligibility and Signal Intensity in a Noisy Environment 5. Chase R. Meusel, Chase Grimm, Stephen Gilbert, and Greg Luecke, Iowa State U., An Agricultural Harvest Knowledge Survey to Distinguish Types of Expertise Tuesday, September 20 3:30−5:00 p.m. Special Invited Sessions These four sessions will showcase guest speakers discussing current topics addressing a broad range of HF/E areas. PL2 – Special Invited Session 1: Automated and Driverless Cars: Separating Myth From Reality SPECIAL INVITED SESSION Tuesday, September 20, 3:30–5:00 p.m. International West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Anthony D. Andre, Interface Analysis Assoc. Panelists: Donald A. Norman, U. of California, San Diego; Alain L. Kornhauser, Princeton U.; Others TBA PL3 – Special Invited Session 2: Deep Space Exploration: New Human Factors Horizons SPECIAL INVITED SESSION Tuesday, September 20, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Jefferson (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Mica R. Endsley, SA Technologies Panelists: Sandra Magnus, American Inst. of Aeronautics and Astronautics; Sam Scimemi, International Space Station Program; Others TBA PL4 – Special Invited Session 3: Human Factors in Cybersecurity SPECIAL INVITED SESSION Tuesday, September 20, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Monroe (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central Florida Panelists: David Schuster, San Jose State U.; Ben D. Sawyer, Massachusetts Inst. of Technology; Others TBA PL5 − Special Invited Session 4: HFES Journal Awards Showcase SPECIAL INVITED SESSION Tuesday, September 20, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Chair: C. Melody Carswell, Chair, Scientific Publications Division This session will feature presentations by recipients of the Human Factors Prize and best paper awards for Human Factors, Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making, and Ergonomics in Design. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 15 TUE SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 0 Tuesday, September 20 5:00–6:30 p.m. All technical and university lab posters are presented during a reception in the Exhibit Hall. POS – Interactive Posters Session and Reception INTERACTIVE SESSIONS Tuesday, September 20, 5:00–6:30 p.m. International Center (Concourse Level) Poster Session Chair: Ronald Boring, Idaho National Lab; Cochair: Thomas Ulrich, U. of Idaho Aerospace Systems Posters 1. Baron C. Summers and Herbert Hauser, Capella U., System Interaction Influences on Cognitive-Affective States to Enhance Performance, Workload, and Knowledge Acquisition in Teams Conducting Close Air Support Simulations 2. Garrin Ross, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; Linda Tomko, Purdue U., Confusion in the Cockpit: Typology, Ante cedents, and Sources 3. Amanda Woods, Chelsea Iwig, Julie Dinh, and Eduardo Salas, Rice U., Informing the Development of a Safety and Performance Metric Selection Toolkit: Subject Matter Experts Weigh In 4. Sarah Sherwood, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; Kelly J. Neville, U.S. Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division; John “Bam Bam” Mooney and Derek “Baffle” Ashlock, BGI, LLC; Angus L. M. Thom McLean III, Rockwell Collins; Melissa Walwanis, U.S. Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division; Amy Bolton, U.S. Office of Naval Research, A Multiyear Assessment of the Safety of Introducing Computer-Generated Aircraft Into Live Air Combat Training 5. Katarina Morowsky and Kenneth H. Funk, Oregon State U., Understanding Differences in Helicopter Mission Sets Prior to Human Error Analysis 6. Javier Rivera, Camilo Jimenez, and Florian Jentsch, U. of Central Florida, Combining Flight Procedures Training With Mental Flexibility Training Augmented Cognition Posters 7. Curtis Craig, Brittany Neilson, and Randy W. Overbeek, Texas Tech U., An Association Between Nature Exposure and Physiological Measures of Emotion and Cognition 8. Michael W. Boyce, Benjamin Goldberg, and Jason D. Moss, U.S. Army Research Lab, Electrodermal Activity Analysis for Training of Military Tactics Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making Posters 9. Katherine Labonté, Sébastien Tremblay, and François Vachon, Université Laval, Effects of a Warning on Interruption Recovery in Dynamic Settings 16 10. Anthony R. Selkowitz, U.S. Army Research Lab; Shan G. Lakhmani and Cintya N. Larios, U. of Central Florida; Jessie Y. C. Chen, U.S. Army Research Lab, Agent Transparency and the Autonomous Squad Member 11. Katelynn A. Kapalo, Elizabeth Phillips, and Stephen M. Fiore, U. of Central Florida, The Application and Extension of the Human-Animal Team Model to Better Understand Human-Robot Interaction: Recommendations for Further Research 12. Samantha F. Warta, Katelynn A. Kapalo, Andrew Best, and Stephen M. Fiore, U. of Central Florida, Similarity, Complementarity, and Agency in HRI: Theoretical Issues in Shifting the Perception of Robots From Tools to Teammates 13. Samantha Zybak, Mark W. Scerbo, and Amanda Ashdown, Old Dominion U., System Reliability, Trust, and Complacency in Fetal Heart Rate Monitoring 14. Timothy J. Wright, U. of Massachusetts-Amherst; William J. Horrey and Mary F. Lesch, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for Safety; Md Mahmudur Rahman, Mississippi State U., Drivers’ Trust in an Autonomous System: Exploring a Covert Video-Based Measure of Trust 15. Terence Hines and Adam Ranellone, Pace U., TV Channel Cards and Office Directories Are Searched Faster When Alphabetized 16. Andrew Best, Samantha F. Warta, Katelynn A. Kapalo, and Stephen M. Fiore, U. of Central Florida, Of Mental States and Machine Learning: How Social Cues and Signals Can Help Develop Artificial Social Intelligence 17. Nathan J. McNeese and Nancy J. Cooke, Arizona State U.; Steven M. Shope, Sandia Research Corp.; Ashley Knobloch, Arizona State U., The Extreme Environment of High-Altitude Gas Ballooning: Lessons Learned in Assessing Cognition Communications Posters 18. Bradford L. Schroeder, Daphne E. Whitmer, Shannon K. T. Bailey, and Valerie K. Sims, U. of Central Florida, Individual Differences in Middle-School and College Students’ Texting 19. Shannon K. T. Bailey, Bradford L. Schroeder, Daphne E. Whitmer, and Valerie K. Sims, U. of Central Florida, Perceptions of Mobile Instant Messaging Apps Are Comparable to Texting for Young Adults in the United States Computer Systems Posters 20. Bradford L. Schroeder, Kevin Leyva, Kimberly Stowers, Joanna E. Lewis, and Valerie K. Sims, U. of Central Florida, Investigating Usability, User Preferences, Ergonomics, and Player Performance in StarCraft II 21. Cathy D. Emery, Michelle A. Sublette, C. Melody Carswell, and K. L. Calvert, U. of Kentucky, Structured Brainstorming Helps Home Network Managers Transcend Technical Language Barriers to Express Their Needs TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 T UESDAY, SEP TEMBER 2 0 22. Robert Bastholm and Anthony J. Masalonis, Spectrum Software Technology, Inc.; Tanya Yuditsky, U.S. Federal Aviation Admin., Development of a Style Guide for the Traffic Flow Management Traffic Situation Display Graphical User Interface Education Posters 23. Shantimora Gala Nikolaeva and Dan Nathan-Roberts, San Jose State U., Various Aspects of the Human Factor in Online Education: Quantitative Literature Review 24. Jamey Popham, Michael Lee, Michelle A. Sublette, Travis M. Kent, and C. Melody Carswell, U. of Kentucky, Flashy or Functional: The Impact of Graphical Content on the Effectiveness of Résumés 25. Angela Yoo and Richard Catrambone, Georgia Tech, The Influence of Situational Interest on Learning Outcomes for Science Videos General Sessions Posters 26. Alexis R. Dewar, Tyler P. Bull, Jessica M. Sproat, Natalie P. Reyes, Donna M. Malvey, and James L. Szalma, U. of Central Florida, Testing the Reliability of a Measure of Motivation to Engage With Telehealth Technology 27. Soo-Chan Jee, Republic of Korea Air Force Headquarters; Yu Shin Lee, Joong Hee Lee, Sunghwan Park, Byungki Jin, and Myung Hwan Yun, Seoul National U., Anthro pometric Classification of Human Hand Shapes in Korean Population Health Care Posters 28. Jenna Garafalo and Dan Nathan-Roberts, San Jose State U., Assessment of the Impacts From the Addition of Novel Assistive Technologies in Mental Health Care 29. Laura Militello and Julie Diiulio, Applied Decision Science, LLC; Alissa Russ, April Savoy, Mindy Flanagan, Himalaya Patel, and Michael Weiner, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Design Concepts to Support Management of Outpatient Consultations in the Veterans Health Administration Human Performance Modeling Posters 30. Yu Du, Michael C. Dorneich, Brian Steward, and Cameron A. MacKenzie, Iowa State U., A BayesianInfluence Model for Error Probability Analysis of Combine Operations in Harvesting 31. Phillip Jasper, Clemson U.; Ciara Sibley and Joseph Coyne, U.S. Naval Research Lab, Using Heart Rate Variability to Assess Operator Mental Workload in a Command-and-Control Simulation of Multiple Unmanned Aerial Vehicles 32. Rosemarie Figueroa, Thomas J. Armstrong, Charles Woolley, Luqin Sun, and Wenxuan Zhou, U. of Michigan; Sandeep Sebastin, National U. of Singapore, Determining Instantaneous Centers of Rotation for Finger Joints Through Different Postures Using the Iterative Closest Point (ICP) Algorithm 33. Ronald L. Boring and Sarah M. Herberger, Idaho National Lab, Testing Subtask Quantification Assumptions for Dynamic Human Reliability Analysis in the SPAR-H Method Individual Differences in Performance Posters 34. Alexis R. Dewar, Kody L. Denues, and James L. Szalma, U. of Central Florida, Motivation Is Important in Game-Based Memory Recall 35. Alexis R. Dewar, Nicholas W. Fraulini, Victoria L. Claypoole, and James L. Szalma, U. of Central Florida, Performance in Vigilance Tasks Is Related to Both State and Contextual Motivation 36. Linda G. Pierce, Cristina L. Byrne, Melissa Beben, and Elaine Pfleiderer, FAA Civil Aerospace Medical Inst., Using a Multidimensional Pairwise Preference Measure of Personality to Predict Training Success of Air Traffic Control Specialists 37. Kyle A. Bernhardt, Kathryn A. Salomon, F. Richard Ferraro, RaeEllen J. Crockett, Heather K. Terrell, Thomas Petros, and Joseph J. Vacek, U. of North Dakota, Individual Differences in Dynamic Multitasking Performance 38. Tarah N. Schmidt-Daly and Jennifer M. Riley, Design Interactive, Inc.; Charles R. Amburn, U.S. Army Research Lab; Kelly S. Hale, Design Interactive, Inc.; P. David Yacht, Design Interactive, Inc., Video Game Play and Effect on Spatial Knowledge Tasks Using an Augmented Sand Table 39. Anna Sumner and Leo Gugerty, Clemson U., Individual Differences in Use of Effective Troubleshooting Strategies 40. Lauren Reinerman-Jones, Gerald Matthews, and Shawn Burke, U. of Central Florida; David Scribner, U.S. Army Research Lab, A Situation Judgment Test for Military Multicultural Decision-Making: Initial Psychometric Studies Internet Posters 41. Philip T. Kortum and Claudia Ziegler Acemyan, Rice U., The Relationship Between User Mouse-Based Performance and Subjective Usability Assessments 42. Michelle Hester, Steffen Werner, Cassie Greenwald, and Jessica Gunning, U. of Idaho, Exploring the Effects of Text Length and Difficulty on RSVP Reading Macroergonomics Posters 43. Nancy J. Cooke and Nathan J. McNeese, Arizona State U.; Steven M. Shope, Sandia Research Corp, Human-Systems Integration: A 28,000-Foot View 44. Cristina L. Byrne and Linda G. Pierce, U.S. Federal Aviation Admin., An Examination of the Impact of Option Preference on Success in FAA ATC Academy Training Occupational Ergonomics Posters 45. Jaejin Hwang, Gregory G. Knapik, Jonathan S. Dufour, and William S. Marras, Ohio State U., A Biologically Assisted Curved Muscle Model of the Lumbar Spine TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 17 TUE SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 0 46. Ibukun A. Sonaike, Oluwatosin A. Bewaji, Paul Ritchey, and S. Camille Peres, Texas A&M U. Health Science Center, The Ergonomic Impact of Swype 47. Carolyn M. Sommerich, Jing Li, Shasank Nagavarupu, Douglas Palmer, Sriya Ngo, Radin Zaid Radin Umar, Dana Keester, and Jennifer Dickerson, Ohio State U., A Pilot Study of an Articulating Support Arm System for Reducing Sustained Posture and Muscular Effort While Performing Echocardiograms Perception and Performance Posters 48. Erin Gannon and Jibo He, Wichita State U.; Xuefei Gao, Max Planck Inst. for Psycholinguistics; Barbara Chaparro, Wichita State U., RSVP Reading on a Smart Watch 49. Megan J. Blakely, Kyle M. Wilson, Paul N. Russell, and William S. Helton, U. of Canterbury, The Impact of Cognitive Load on Volitional Running 50. Kaifeng Liu, U. of Hong Kong; Foon-Yee Chan, New Territories Cluster Hospital Authority; Calvin Ka-Lun Or, U. of Hong Kong; David Tin-Fung Sun, Mavis Wai-See Lai, and Hing-Yu So, New Territories Cluster Hospital Authority, Nurses’ Perceived Ease of Use, Mental Effort, and Likelihood of Programming Errors for Four Infusion Pumps 51. Victoria L. Claypoole, Alexis R. Dewar, Nicholas W. Fraulini, and James L. Szalma, U. of Central Florida, Effects of Social Facilitation on Perceived Workload, Subjective Stress, and Vigilance-Related Anxiety 52. Victor S. Finomore, Christopher K. McClernon, Jason R. Amick, and Derrick Pee, U.S. Air Force Academy; Gregory J. Funke and Joel S. Warm, U.S. Air Force Research Lab, Short Vigilance Tasks Are Hard Work Even If Time Flies 53. Richard T. Stone, Thomas M. Schnieders, Chen-Shuang Wei, and Tyler Oviatt, Iowa State U., The Impact of Inspector’s Cognitive Style on Performance in Various Visual Inspection Display Tasks 54. Kyle M. Wilson, U. of Huddersfield; Paul N. Russell, U. of Canterbury; Neil R. de Joux, U. of Nottingham; Megan J. Blakely and William S. Helton, U. of Canterbury, Negative Stimuli May Improve Visuospatial Working Memory Product Design Posters 55. Claudia Ziegler Acemyan and Philip T. Kortum, Rice U., Can Voters Tell When Their Voting Method Is Secure? Effects of End-to-End Security and Security Theater on Perceptions of Voting Systems 56. Ilsun Rhiu, Sung Hee Ahn, Donggun Park, Wonjoon Kim, and Myung Hwan Yun, Seoul National U., An Analysis of User Experience of Smartphone Based on Product Smartness Utilizing Social Media Data 57. Michelle A. Sublette, C. Melody Carswell, Michael Lee, and T. Kent, U. of Kentucky, Toward a Taxonomy for Classifying Intuitive Usability Prediction Strategies in Nonexperts 58. Michael A. Rupp, Jessica R. Michaelis, Daniel S. McConnell, and Janan A. Smither, U. of Central Florida, The Impact of Technological Trust and Self-Determined Motivation on Intentions to Use Wearable Fitness Technology 18 Safety Posters 59. Gayle Schwark, Arizona State U.; Stephen Rice, EmbryRiddle Aeronautical U., An Affect-Trust (A-T) Model With Regard to Technological Errors 60. Daphne E. Whitmer, Valerie K. Sims, Shannon K. T. Bailey, and Bradford L. Schroeder, U. of Central Florida, Time to Decide: To Call or Not to Call 911 During Weather Crises Surface Transportation Posters 61. Vaughan W. Inman and Steven Jackson, Leidos; Brian H. Philips, U.S. Federal Highway Admin., Driver Perfor mance in a Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control String 62. Steven J. Kass, Alex Jarstad, and Lisa VanWormer, U. of West Florida, Effects of Mobile Phone Dependence on Driver Distraction 63. Robert J. Sall and Jing Feng, North Carolina State U., Better off Alone: The Presence of One Hazard Impedes Detection of Another in Simulated Traffic Scenes 64. Michael A. Nees, Lafayette College, Acceptance of Self-Driving Cars: An Examination of Idealized Versus Realistic Portrayals With a Self-Driving Car Acceptance Scale 65. Jacob D. Achtemeier and Nichole L. Morris, U. of Minnesota, An Assessment of Safety Culture While Navigating Work Zones: Attitudes and Behavior Toward In-Vehicle Messaging Technologies System Development Posters 66. Jonathan E. Velez and Florian Jentsch, U. of Central Florida, Robot Emotive Display Systems and the Analogous Physical Features of Emotion 67. Gregory M. Costedoat and Dan Nathan-Roberts, San Jose State U., The Effects of Night Work on Nurses and an Analysis of Countermeasures 68. Victor S. Finomore, Christopher K. McClernon, Jantz V. Johnson, Jacob K. Snow, and Jessica M. Steuber, U.S. Air Force Academy, Helmet-Mounted Display Layouts: Detection and Shooting Performance for Dismounted Operators Test and Evaluation Posters 69. Stephanie A. T. Brown and Jay A. McNamara, U.S. Army Natick Soldier Research, Development, & Engineering Center; Hyeg Joo Choi, Oak Ridge Inst. for Science and Education; K. Blake Mitchell, U.S. Army Natick Soldier Research, Development, & Engineering Center, Assessment of a Marksmanship Simulator as a Tool for Clothing and Individual Equipment Evaluation 70. Phillip Jasper, Adam Hoover, and Eric Muth, Clemson U., Determining the Utility of a Laboratory Eating Paradigm to Explore Social Eating 71. Gayle Schwark, Arizona State U.; Stephen Rice, EmbryRiddle Aeronautical U.; Lisa Busche, Crown College; David Trafimow, New Mexico State U., Recognizing the Role of Consistency in a Delayed Memory Task TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 T UESDAY, SEP TEMBER 2 0 72. Nicholas W. Fraulini, Victoria L. Claypoole, Alexis R. Dewar, and James L. Szalma, U. of Central Florida, Examining Measures of Mental Workload Across Cognitive- and Sensory-Based Vigilance Tasks 73. Gregory J. Funke, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Eric T. Greenlee, Texas Tech U.; Martha Carter, Miami U.; Allen Dukes, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Rebecca Brown and Lauren Menke, Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp., Which Eye Tracker Is Right for Your Research? Performance Evaluation of Several Cost-Variant Eye Trackers 74. Michael Hildebrandt and Alexandra Fernandes, Inst. for Energy Technology, Micro Task Evaluation of Analog vs. Digital Power Plant Control Room Interfaces 75. Yasmin Diederiks and Ivonne Figueroa, George Mason U., The Usability of Academic Advising Forms Training Posters 76. Keaton A. Fletcher and Wendy L. Bedwell, U. of South Florida, An Initial Look at the Effects of Interruptions on Strain 77. Jake R. Mathwich, Keaton A. Fletcher, and Wendy L. Bedwell, U. of South Florida, You’ve Got Mail: Examination of a Brief Online Email Training 78. Matthew D. Marraffino and Cheryl I. Johnson, U.S. Navy Air Warfare Center Training Systems Division, Applying Multimedia Learning Principles to Design Effective Mobile Training 79. Scott Ososky, Keith Brawner, Benjamin Goldberg, and Robert A. Sottilare, U.S. Army Research Lab, GIFT Cloud: Improving Usability of Adaptive Tutor Authoring Tools Within a Web-Based Application 80. Martha J. Sanders, Quinnipiac U., Examining Children’s Concepts of Health Related to Backpack Safety 81. Heather C. Lum, Richard L. Greatbatch, Grace E. Waldfogle, and Jacob D. Benedict, Penn State Erie, The Behrend College; David A. Nembhard, Pennsylvania State U., The Relationship of Eye Movement, Workload, and Attention on Learning in a Computer-Based Training Program Virtual Environments Posters 82. Janet Wu Chastain and Dan Nathan-Roberts, San Jose State U., Recommendations for Virtual Teamwork Based on Human Factors Research 83. Travis M. Kent, Bo Fu, Brittany D. Walls, Will Seidelman, Michelle A. Sublette, Michael Lee, C. Melody Carswell, and Ruigang Yang, U. of Kentucky, Does an Abstract Weld Pool Visualization Help Novice Welders Assess the Performance of a Weldbot? 84. Preston Brown, Kallan Christensen, and David Schuster, San Jose State U., An Investigation of Trust in a Cyber Security Tool 85. Jerred C. Holt and Chantale N. Wilson, U.S. Air Force Research Lab, Adaptive Feedback for Enhanced Simulation-Based Training University Lab Posters 86. Arizona State U, Human Systems Engineering Labs 87. Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U., Game-Based Education & Advanced Research Studies (GEARS) Lab 88. Georgia Tech, Human Factors and Aging Lab, Cognitive Ergonomics Lab, Decision Process Lab, Knowledge and Skill Lab, Problem Solving and Educational Technology Lab, & Sonification Lab 89. Michigan State U., Usability / Accessibility Research and Consulting and the Department of Media and Information 90. PUC-Rio Pontifical Catholic U. of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, LEUI Lab of Ergodesign and Usability of Interfaces 91. Texas Tech U., Visual Perception & Human Factors Lab; Stress, Workload, & Performance Lab; Jones Lab; Greenlee Lab 92. U. of Southern California, Health Systems Improvement Collaborative 93. Ulsan National Inst. of Science and Technology (UNIST), Korea, Department of Human Factors Engineering 94. U. of Central Florida, Machines in Thought / Minds in Technology (MIT) Lab 95. U. of Houston – Clear Lake, PANDA Lab & DAAnG Lab 96. U. of Louisville, Center of Ergonomics 97. U. of Michigan, Center for Ergonomics 98. Virginia Tech, The Cogent Lab 99. U. of South Dakota, Heimstra Human Factors Labs Tuesday, September 20 6:30–9:00 p.m. HFES Annual Business Meeting 6:30–7:00 p.m. Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Training Technical Group Networking/Business Meeting 6:30–7:30 p.m. Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Product Design Technical Group Reception 7:00–9:00 p.m. Off site TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 19 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 Wednesday, September 21 7:30−8:30 a.m. Education Technical Group Networking/Business Meeting (Breakfast) 7:00−8:30 a.m. Gunston East (Terrace Level) Wednesday, September 21 8:30−10:00 a.m. CE1 – User Interface Design for Unmanned Systems COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING; COSPONSORED BY AEROSPACE SYSTEMS Wednesday, September 21, 8:30–10:00 a.m. International West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Amy R. Pritchett, Georgia Tech; Cochair: Joey C. Y. So, John Deere 1. Elizabeth M. Mersch, Wright State Research Inst.; Kyle J. Behymer, Infoscitex Corp.; Gloria L. Calhoun, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Heath A. Ruff, Infoscitex Corp.; Jared S. Dewey, U.S. Air Force Research Lab, Game-Based Delegation Interface Design for Unmanned Vehicles: Color Coding and Icon Row Assignment 2. Samuel J. Levulis, Texas Tech U.; So Young Kim, General Electric; Patricia R. DeLucia, Texas Tech U., Effects of Touch, Voice, and Multimodal Input on Multiple-UAV Monitoring During Simulated MannedUnmanned Teaming in a Military Helicopter 3. Dorrit Billman and Shu-Chieh Wu, San Jose State U.; Chengcheng Fan, Stanford U., Representing Work for Device Design and Evaluation Using Biclustering 4. Beth Depass, Raytheon BBN Technologies; Emilie Roth, Roth Cognitive Engineering; Ronald Scott and Jonathon Harter, Raytheon BBN Technologies; Jeffrey Wampler, U.S. Air Force Research Lab, The Role of Operationally Distinct Options in Supporting Joint Human-Automation Planning 5. James C. Walliser, George Mason U.; Ewart J. de Visser, Perceptronics Solutions, Inc.; Tyler H. Shaw, George Mason U., Application of a System-Wide Trust Strategy When Supervising Multiple Autonomous Agents CS2/I – When The Walls Have Ears: Designing for Privacy in the Age of Smart COMPUTER SYSTEMS; COSPONSORED BY INTERNET Wednesday, September 21, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Invited Address Chair: Juan Gilbert, U. of Florida; Cochair: Ania Rodriguez, Key Lime Interactive Invited Speaker: Faith A. McCreary, Intel Corp. 20 DEM – Interactive Demonstrations INTERACTIVE SESSIONS Wednesday, September 21, 8:30–10:00 a.m. International Center (Concourse Level) Demonstrations Chair: Ronald Boring, Idaho National Lab NOTE: Demonstrations will be repeated throughout the session. 1. Byeol Kim, Warren Schwartz, Danny Catacora, and Monifa Vaughn-Cooke, U. of Maryland, College Park, Virtual Reality Behavioral Therapy 2. Christopher Scott Fahey, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; Devin Platte, SpaceX; Trevor Rizzo, Spencer Mowrey, William Smith, Lonnie Marts, Arthur Hinsvark, Skylor Wieland, and Nathan A. Sonnenfeld, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U., Game Development Process of The Hauntlet 3. Karen Jacobs and Amanda Nardone, Boston U.; Deborah J. Hendricks, West Virginia U.; Phillip Rumrill, Kent State U.; Eileen Elias, and Anne Leopold, JBS International, Inc.; Callista Stauffer, Kent State U.; Elaine Sampson, West Virginia U.; Marcia Scherer, Inst. for Matching Person and Technology, Cognitive Support Technology: Approaches for Postsecondary Students With a Traumatic Brain Injury 4. Kelly Burke and David Wing, NASA Langley Research Center, Demonstration of the Traffic Aware Planner: The Software Application for the NASA TASAR Concept 5. Ciara Sibley and Joseph Coyne, U.S. Naval Research Lab; Jim Thomas, EOIR Technologies, Demonstrating the Supervisory Control Operations User Testbed (SCOUT) E1 – Human Factors in the Classroom and Beyond EDUCATION Wednesday, September 21, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Monroe (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Tonya L. Smith-Jackson, North Carolina A&T State U.; Cochair: Christopher Via, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U. 1. Lawton Pybus, Allaire K. Welk, and Douglas J. Gillan, North Carolina State U., Differences in Mental Model Development Among Psychology and Engineering Students of a Human Factors Course 2. Anne Collins McLaughlin, North Carolina State U., Building a Better Prelims: An Exam to Remember 3. Esa M. Rantanen, Rochester Inst. of Technology, Trends in Knowledge and Skill Expectations for New Human Factors Professionals 4. Brianna S. Benedict, Tonya Smith-Jackson, and Asante Bells, North Carolina A&T State U., Development of Design Guidelines for 21st-Century Sociocognitive Writing Technologies 5. Desmond Bonner and Michael Dorneich, Iowa State U., Development of Game-Based Learning Requirements to Increase Female Middle-School Students’ Interest in Computer Science WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 GS3 – Peculiarities in Human Factors Consulting on Government Projects OE3 – Ergonomics of Task Design and Space Engineering GENERAL SESSIONS; COSPONSORED BY INTERNET OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS; COSPONSORED BY SAFETY Wednesday, September 21, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Dick Horst, UserWorks, Inc. Panelists: Sean Fitzpatrick, Aquilent; Cory Lebson, Lebsontech, LLC; Rich Panzer, IQ Solutions; Jeff Pass, Aquilent Wednesday, September 21, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Jefferson West (Concourse Level) Alternative Format Chair: Christopher R. Reid, Boeing Co. 1. Vernnaliz Carrasquillo, Thomas J. Armstrong, and S. Jack Hu, U. of Michigan, Effect of Customer Demand in a SelfPaced Mass Customization Assembly Line on Worker Posture and Recovery Time: An Observation Study 2. Justin M. Haney, Mary Owczarczak, Clive D’Souza, Monica L. H. Jones, and Matthew P. Reed, U. of Michigan, A Pilot Study of the Effects of Pulley Location and Design Parameters on Hand Movements During Pulley-Threading Operations 3. Saad Alabdulkarim, Maury A. Nussbaum, Ehsan Rashedi, Sunwook Kim, and Michael Agnew, Virginia Tech; Richard Gardner, Boeing Co., Impact of Task Design on Productivity and Quality 4. Stephen Robinson, U. of California, Davis, Invited Address: Human-Systems Engineering in Space HC2 – Cognitive Engineering in Health Care HEALTH CARE Wednesday, September 21, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Carrie Reale, Vanderbilt U. Medical Center; Cochair: Laura Barg-Walkow, Georgia Tech 1. Tara McCurdie and Penelope Sanderson, U. of Queensland; Leanne M. Aitken, Griffith U.; David Liu, U. of Queensland, Interruptions in the Health-Care Workplace: An Alternative Approach 2. Daniel T. Nystrom, Houston VA Center for Innovations in Quality, Effectiveness, and Safety; Douglas E. Paull, VA National Center for Patient Safety; Ashley N. D. Meyer and Hardeep Singh, Houston VA Center for Innovations in Quality, Effectiveness, and Safety, Virtual Patient Simulation: A Method to Study Diagnostic Process as an Emergent Aspect of Information-Sampling Behavior 3. Tobias Grundgeiger and Christoph Klöffel, JuliusMaximilians-Universität Würzburg; Sophia Mohme, Thomas Wurmb, and Oliver Happel, U. Hospital Würzburg, Visual Attention in Anesthesiology: The Effect of the Environment (Simulated vs. Real) and Expertise (Junior vs. Senior) 4. Taylor Ann Hanley, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Andrew Schemmel, Matthew Lee, Bryan D. Pooler, John-Paul J. Yu, and Tabassum Kennedy, U. of Wisconsin Hospital; Douglas A. Wiegmann, U. of Wisconsin-Madison, Interruptions in the Radiology Physician Workflow ME2 – This Changes Everything: Macroergonomics and the Future of Sustainability MACROERGONOMICS Wednesday, September 21, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Andrew Thatcher, U. of the Witwatersrand Panelists: Patrick Waterson, Loughborough U.; Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central Florida; Matthew C. Davis, Leeds U.; Klaus J. Zink, U. of Kaiserslautern; Antony Hilliard, U. of Toronto PP3 – Monitoring PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE Wednesday, September 21, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Carryl Baldwin, George Mason U.; Cochair: Julie Stark, ONR Global 1. Eric T. Greenlee, Texas Tech U.; Joel S. Warm, Gregory J. Funke, Robert E. Patterson, Adam J. Strang, Victor S. Finomore, and Laura E. Barnes, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Matthew E. Funke, U.S. Navy Medical Research Unit Dayton, Event-Related Cerebral Hemodynamics in 2-D and 3-D Visual Vigilance Tasks 2. Nicole D. Karpinsky, Eric T. Chancey, and Yusuke Yamani, Old Dominion U., Modeling Relationships Among Workload, Trust, and Visual Scanning in an Automated Flight Task 3. Paul Schlosser, Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg; Penelope Sanderson, U. Of Queensland; Tobias Grundgeiger, Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg; David Liu, U. Of Queensland; Robert G. Loeb, U. of Arizona, The Effect of Conventional Screens vs. Head-Mounted Displays on Alarm-Monitoring Strategies 4. Michael Pascale, Penelope Sanderson, David Liu, Ismail Mohamed, and Birgit Brecknell, U. of Queensland; Robert Loeb, U. of Arizona, Continuous Information Displays for Multiple Patient Monitoring 5. Emma McNulty, Dannielle Brown, Chiara Santomauro, Mia McLanders, Jimmy Tran, and Penelope Sanderson, U. of Queensland, Vibrotactile Displays of Pulse Oximetry: Exploratory Studies of Three Novel Designs WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 21 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 S3 – Driving and Safety SAFETY Wednesday, September 21, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: James G. Borchardt, Construction Ergonomics LLC; Cochair: William Perez, Leidos 1. Maranda McBride, North Carolina A&T State U.; Lemuria Carter, Virginia Commonwealth U., Teen Texting While Driving: Factors Influencing This Epidemic Behavior 2. Donald L. Fisher, U. of Massachusetts-Amherst; Emily Nodine and Andrew Lam, Volpe National Transportation Systems Center; Christian Jerome and Chris Monk, National Highway Traffic Safety Admin.; Wassim Najm, Volpe National Transportation Systems Center, Effects on Drivers’ Behavior of Forward Collision Warning System Alerts 3. Raina J. Shah, Charles G. Burhans, Michael J. Wise, J. Paul Frantz, and Timothy P. Rhoades, Applied Safety and Ergonomics, Inc., Exploring the Relationship Between Risk Perception and U.S. Driver Acceptance of a 0.05% BAC Limit 4. Yousif Abulhassan, Jerry Davis, Richard Sesek, Sean Gallagher, Mark C. Schall, Jr., and Aimee Callender, Auburn U., Relating the Strength Capabilities of Children to the Design of School Bus Emergency Roof Hatches Wednesday, September 21 10:00–11:00 a.m. SS2 – Posters With Fellows SPECIAL SESSIONS Wednesday, September 21, 10:00–11:00 a.m. International Center (Concourse Level) View and discuss the work of some of the Society’s most distinguished members. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 22 Thomas J. Armstrong, U. of Michigan Ann M. Bisantz, U. at Buffalo, SUNY Deborah A. Boehm-Davis, George Mason U. Gloria L. Calhoun, U.S. Air Force Stanley H. Caplan, Usability Associates Nancy J. Cooke, Arizona State U. Kermit G. Davis, U. of Cincinnati Valerie J. Gawron, MITRE Corp. Douglas J. Gillan, North Carolina State U. Daniel Gopher, Technion-IIT Wayne D. Gray, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Joel S. Greenstein, Clemson U. M. Susan Hallbeck, Mayo Clinic Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central Florida Robert Hoffman, Inst. for Human and Machine Cognition 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. Edmond W. Israelski, Abbvie Brian M. Kleiner, Virginia Tech John D. Lee, U. of Wisconsin, Madison Arnold M. Lund, Amazon Lab126 Thomas B. Malone, Carlow International Inc. William S. Marras, Ohio State U. Kathleen L. Mosier, San Francisco State U. Y. Ian Noy, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for Safety Robert W. Proctor, Purdue U. Ronald G. Shapiro, Consultant Matthew B. Weinger, Vanderbilt U. Christopher D. Wickens, Alion Science & Technology Wednesday, September 21 10:30 a.m.−12:00 noon AC1 – Augmented Cognition AUGMENTED COGNITION Wednesday, September 21, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Georgetown East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Ashley Hughes, Baylor College of Medicine; Cochair: Yueqing Li, Lamar U. 1. Sherif M. Abdelfattah, Kathryn E. Merrick, and Hussein A. Abbass, U. of New South Wales, Theta-Beta Ratios Are Prominent EEG Features for Visual Tracking Tasks 2. Simon R. H. Davies, Urmila Mistry, Laura Millen, Lee Skrypchuk, and Jim Braithwaite, Jaguar Land Rover, Ltd., Evaluation of an EEG/Electrodermal Hybrid Device to Ascertain a User’s Attentional State 3. Brett J. Borghetti, Joseph J. Giametta, and Christina F. Rusnock, U.S. Air Force Inst. of Technology, Estimating Operator Workload From Small Participant Samples 4. Avonie Parchment, Ryan W. Wohleber, and Lauren Reinerman-Jones, U. of Central Florida, The Importance of a Strong Methodology When Choosing Baselines for Physiological Assessment 5. Joseph Coyne and Ciara Sibley, U.S. Naval Research Lab, Investigating the Use of Two Low-Cost Eye-Tracking Systems for Detecting Pupillary Response to Changes in Mental Workload 6. Melissa R. Scheldrup, Pritty Dwivedy, Jennifer Fisher, Julieanne Holmblad, and Pamela Greenwood, George Mason U., Modulation of Complex Multitask Performance by tDCS Depends on Individual Differences in Baseline Task Ability WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 CE2 – Teamwork COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Wednesday, September 21, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Frank Hannigan, Quantum Improvements Consulting; Cochair: Nathan J. McNeese, Arizona State U. 1. Michael D. McNeese, Pennsylvania State U.; Nathan J. McNeese, Arizona State U., Intelligent Teamwork: A History, Framework, and Lessons Learned 2. D. H. Cymek, S. Jahn, and Dietrich H. Manzey, Technische Universität Berlin, Monitoring and Cross-Checking Automation: Do Four Eyes See More Than Two? 3. Timothy J. Neville, Paul M. Salmon, and Gemma J. M. Read, U. of the Sunshine Coast, Toward a Model for Measuring Teamwork in Australian Rules Football Officials 4. Matthew-Donald D. Sangster, David J. Mendonça, and Wayne D. Gray, Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst., Big Data Meets Team Expertise in a Dynamic Task Environment CE3 – From Cognitive Theory to Operational Transition: One Program’s Path Across the Valley of Death COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Wednesday, September 21, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon International West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Wayne W. Zachary, CHI Systems, Inc. Panelists: Stephen M. Fiore, U. of Central Florida; Jeffery Morrison, U.S. Office of Naval Research; Josey Wales, U.S. Naval Sea Systems Command; Christopher D. Wickens, Colorado State U. CS3/I – Guerilla Usability: An Exercise Employing Rapid, Iterative Testing in the Wild COMPUTER SYSTEMS; COSPONSORED BY INTERNET Wednesday, September 21, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Alternative Format Chairs: Bridget Lewis, George Mason U.; Lara Cheng, Purdue U.; Jay Elkerton, Emerson Process Management Participants will be given a mobile interface (Web page or application) to evaluate, redesign, and test using Guerilla testing methods. The interface and guidelines will be released and announced just prior to the Annual Meeting, and interested participants will have two days to test and iterate, culminating in a presentation of their findings and experiences during this session. E2 – Global Perspectives on Human Factors & Ergonomics EDUCATION Wednesday, September 21, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Monroe (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Heather Lum, Penn State Erie, The Behrend College Panelists: Megan Olson, Texas Tech U.; Sami Durrani, UL-Wiklund; William S. Helton, U. of Canterbury; Halimahtun M. Khalid, Damai Sciences; Simon Y. W. Li, Lingnan U.; Patrick Waterson, Loughborough U. ED1 – Environmental Design in Education and Training: What Do We Know and Where Are We Going? ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN Wednesday, September 21, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Nancy J. Stone, Missouri U. of Science and Technology; Cochair: ConneMara Bazley, JimConna, Inc. Panelists: Karen Jacobs, Boston U.; Michelle M. Robertson, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for Safety; Ronald L. Boring, Idaho National Lab; Valerie Rice, U.S. Army Research Lab; Barrett S. Caldwell, Purdue U. HC3 – Enhancing Provider Performance HEALTH CARE; COSPONSORED BY COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Wednesday, September 21, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Kermit G. Davis, U. of Cincinnati; Cochair: Farzan Sasangohar, Texas A&M U. 1. Kristen Lise Welsh, Joseph R. Keebler, Agnes Fagerlund, Victoria Lew, and Elizabeth Lazzara, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U., Communication Theories Applied to Transitions of Care 2. Yuval Bitan and Yisrael Parmet, Ben-Gurion U. of the Negev; Geva Greenfield, Imperial College London; Shelly Teng, U. of Pennsylvania; Mark Nunnally, U. of Chicago, The Cognitive Task of Medication Reconciliation − Clinicians’ Approaches to the Arrangement of Medical Condition and Medication History Information 3. Adjhaporn Khunlertkit and Nichole Jantzi, Johns Hopkins U., Using the SEIPS Framework to Reveal Hidden Factors That Can Complicate a Vaccine Documentation Process 4. Jonathan Umansky and Esa M. Rantanen, Rochester Inst. of Technology, Workload in Nursing 5. Ann Schoofs Hundt, Caitlyn Ngam, Pascale Carayon, Nicholas Haun, and Nasia Safdar, U. of WisconsinMadison, Work System Barriers and Facilitators to Compliance With Infection Prevention Intervention: Initial Findings Regarding Hand Hygiene From Three Target Roles WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 23 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 HC4 – Advanced Technologies in Health Care VE2 – A Collection of Virtual Environments HEALTH CARE VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS Wednesday, September 21, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Shilo Anders, Vanderbilt U.; Cochair: Kristen Welsh, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U. 1. Richard A. del Rio, Russell J. Branaghan, and Rob Gray, Arizona State U., Design Features of Wearable AR Information Display for Surgery and Anesthesiology 2. Giuseppe Andreoni, and Marco Mazzola, Politecnico di Milano; Tiziana Atzori and Federica Vannetti, IRCCS Fondazione Don Carlo Gnocchi; Lucia Modi, Esaote S.p.A; Sara D’Onofrio and Leonardo Forzoni, Esaote S.p.A, Digital Human Models for Automated Ultrasound User Interface Design 3. Abigail R. Wooldridge, Pascale Carayon, and Peter Hoonakker, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Albert Musa and Philip Bain, Dean Health System, Technology-Mediated Communication Between Patients and Primary Care Clinicians and Staff: Ambiguity in Secure Messaging 4. Stuart Marshall, Monash U.; Benjamin Warren, Owen Roodenburg, and Frank Smolenaers, Alfred Health; Graciela Leon, Melbourne U.; Amy McKimm, Martin Keogh, Josh Stuart, and Maria Logan, Alfred Health; Andrew Stripp, Monash Health, An Electronic Task Management (ETM) System for After-Hours Hospital Work and Subsequent Socially Mediated Effects of Task Completion Wednesday, September 21, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Fairchild (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Christopher Via, Embry-Riddle Aeronatical U. 1. Michael A. Rupp, James Kozachuk, Jessica R. Michaelis, Katy L. Odette, Janan A. Smither, and Daniel S. McConnell, U. of Central Florida, The Effects of Immersiveness and Future VR Expectations on Subjective Experiences During an Educational 360-Degree Video 2. Hyungil Kim, Jessica D. Isleib, and Joseph L. Gabbard, Virginia Tech, Virtual Shadow: Making Cross-Traffic Dynamics Visible Through Augmented Reality Head-Up Display 3. Keith T. Shubeck, U. of Memphis; Scotty D. Craig, Arizona State U.; Xiangen Hu, U. of Memphis, Live-Action Mass-Casualty Training and Virtual World Training: A Comparison 4. Tyler J. Renshaw, Nathan A. Sonnenfeld, and Matthew D. Meyers, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U., Fundamentals for a Turing Test of Virtual Reality 5. Benjamin Goldberg and Robert A. Sottilare, U.S. Army Research Lab, To Embed or Not to Embed, That Is the Question: Pedagogical Agents Effect on Flow in Game-Based Training PD2 – Ergonomic Advances PRODUCT DESIGN Wednesday, September 21, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Natalia Russi-Vigoya, Hewlett-Packard Inc.; Cochair: Han Zhang 1. Laura A. Matalenas, Tengwen Hu, Vishnu Veeramachaneni, and John Muth, North Carolina State U., A Cane for More Than Walking: The Design of a Smart Cane for Physical Therapy 2. Kiseok Sung, Jay Cho, and Andris Freivalds, Pennsylvania State U., Effects of Grip Span in One-Handed Thumb Interaction With a Smartphone: Beyond the Thumb’s Length Limitation 3. Wonsup Lee, Delft U. of Technology; Hayoung Jung, Pohang U. of Science and Technology; Ilgeun Bok, Chulwoo Kim, and Ochae Kwon, Samsung Electronics; Teukgyu Choi, Humanopia, Co. Ltd.; Heecheon You, Pohang U. of Science and Technology, Measurement and Application of 3-D Ear Images for Earphone Design 4. Nahyeon Lee, Seunghoon Lee, Baekhee Lee, Hayoung Jung, and Heecheon You, Pohang U. of Science and Technology, Ergonomic Evaluation on Handle Designs of Vacuum Cleaner 24 Wednesday, September 21 12:00 noon−1:30 p.m. Technical Group Networking/ Business Meetings Aging Technical Group Networking/Business Meeting (Lunch) 12:00 noon−1:30 p.m. Gunston West (Terrace Level) System Development Technical Group Networking/ Business Meeting (Lunch) 12:00 noon−1:30 p.m. Off site WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 Wednesday, September 21 1:30−3:00 p.m. CE4 – Expert Decision Making COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Wednesday, September 21, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Laura Militello, Applied Decision Science, LLC; Cochair: Nathan Lau, Virginia Tech 1. Matylda Gerber, Warsaw School of Economics; B. L. William Wong and Neesha Kodagoda, Middlesex U. London, How Analysts Think: Intuition, Leap of Faith, and Insight 2. B. L. William Wong and Neesha Kodagoda, Middlesex U., How Analysts Think: Anchoring, Laddering, and Associations 3. Mark S. Pfaff, Jill L. Drury, and Gary L. Klein, MITRE Corp.; Crystal Boston-Clay, Indiana U.-Purdue U. Indianapolis, Modeling Knowledge Using a Crowd of Experts 4. Nathan Bos, Johns Hopkins U. Applied Physics Lab; Celeste Lyn Paul, U.S. Department of Defense; John R. Gersh, Ariel Greenberg, Christine Piatko, Scott Sperling, and Jason Spitaletta, Johns Hopkins U. Applied Physics Lab; Dustin L. Arendt and Russ Burtner, Pacific Northwest National Lab, Effects of Gain/Loss Framing in Cyber Defense Decision Making CE5 – Is Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS) Appropriate for Your Research? COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Wednesday, September 21, 1:30–3:00 p.m. International West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Ranjana Mehta, Texas A&M U. Panelists: Hasan Ayaz, Drexel U.; Ryan McKendrick, George Mason U.; Kurtulus Izzetoglu, Drexel U.; Ben Willems, FAA William J. Hughes Technical Center; Matthias Ziegler, Lockheed Martin CS4/I – Marc Resnick Best Paper Competition COMPUTER SYSTEMS; COSPONSORED BY INTERNET Wednesday, September 21, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Jay Elkerton, Emerson Process Management; Cochair: Robert Pastel, Michigan Technological U. 1. Aiping Xiong, Robert Proctor, Weining Yang, and Ninghui Li, Purdue U, Ineffectiveness of Domain Highlighting as a Tool to Help Users Identify Phishing Web Pages 2. Alex Vieane, Colorado State U.; Gregory J. Funke, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Vincent Mancuso, MIT Lincoln Lab; Eric T. Greenlee, Texas Tech U.; Gregory Dye, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Brett J. Borghetti, U.S. Air Force Inst. of Technology; Brent Miller, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Lauren Menke and Rebecca Brown, Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp., Coordinated Displays to Assist Cyber Defenders 3. James H. Creager and Douglas J. Gillan, North Carolina State U., Toward Understanding the Findability and Discoverability of Shading Gradients in Almost-Flat Design 4. Royce M. Mou, Electa A. Baker, and Julie A. Adams, Vanderbilt U., Increasing Robot Saliency in Cluttered Visual Displays OE4 – Ergonomics Research Funding: What Does the Future Hold? OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS Wednesday, September 21, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Jefferson West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Kermit G. Davis, U. of Cincinnati; Cochair: William S. Marras, Ohio State U. Panelists: Brian Lawrence, Hill-Rom; Brian Baird, Founder and President, 4Pir2 communication; Timothy Vinopal, Boeing Co.; Winston R. Bennett, U.S. Air Force OE5 – Characterizing Risk of Vibration OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS Wednesday, September 21, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Jack T. Dennerlein, Northeastern U.; Cochair: Patrick Dempsey, National Inst. of Occupational Safety & Health 1. Jeong Ho Kim, Oregon State U.; Monica Zigman, U. of Washington; Jack T. Dennerlein, Northeastern U.; Peter W. Johnson, U. of Washington, Cross-Sectional Analysis of Whole-Body Vibration Exposures and Health Status Among Long-Haul Truck Drivers 2. Fangfang Wang, U. of Washington; Hugh Davies, U. of British Columbia; Bronson Du, U. of Waterloo; Peter W. Johnson, U. of Washington, Comparing the Whole-Body Vibration Exposures Across Three Truck Seats 3. D. Lynas, and Robin Burgess-Limerick, U. of Queensland, Whole-Body Vibration Exposures in Underground CoalMining Operations 4. Jeong Ho Kim, Oregon State U.; Jack T. Dennerlein, Northeastern U.; Peter W. Johnson, U. of Washington, The Comparisons of Whole-Body Vibration Exposures and Supporting Musculature Loading Between Singleand Multi-Axial Suspension Seats During Agricultural Tractor Operation 5. Luz S. Marin, Northeastern U.; Andrés Rodriguez, Estefany Rey, and Lope H. Barrero, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana; Jack T. Dennerlein, Northeastern U.; Peter W. Johnson, U. of Washington, Influence of Speed in Whole-Body Vibration Exposure in Heavy-Equipment Mining Vehicles WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 25 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 PD3 – Influences of the Modern Age on Design and Usability PRODUCT DESIGN Wednesday, September 21, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Xinhui Zhu, Oregon State U.; Cochair: Denny Yu, Purdue U. 1. Vivian Genaro Motti, George Mason U.; Kelly Caine, Clemson U., Toward a Visual Vocabulary for Privacy Concepts 2. Qinge Wu, Kelli Sum, and Dan Nathan-Roberts, San Jose State U., How Fitness Trackers Facilitate Health Behavior Change 3. John Grishin and Douglas J. Gillan, North Carolina State U., Structure Matters: Effects of Semantic Relatedness and Proximity on Consumer Search and Integration Tasks 4. Jessica R. Michaelis, Michael A. Rupp, James Kozachuk, Baotran Ho, Daniela Zapata-Ocampo, Daniel S. McConnell, and Janan A. Smither, U. of Central Florida, Describing the User Experience of Wearable Fitness Technology Through Online Product Reviews 5. Swaroop Dinakar, Crash Safety Research Center, LLC; Kathryn G. Tippey, Trey Roady, Julien Edery, and Thomas K. Ferris, Texas A&M U., Using Modern Social Network Techniques to Expand Link Analysis in a Nuclear Reactor Console Redesign PP4 – Vigilance and Fatigue: A Double-Sided Coin? PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE Wednesday, September 21, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Monroe (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Jesse Lee Eisert, George Mason U Panelists: Francesco Di Nocera, U. of Rome; Carryl L. Baldwin, George Mason U.; John D. Lee, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; J. Stephen Higgins, National Highway Traffic Safety Admin.; William S. Helton, U. of Canterbury; Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central Florida S4 – Arnold M. Small Lecture in Safety SAFETY Wednesday, September 21, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Invited Address Chair: Tonya L. Smith-Jackson, North Carolina A&T State U. Invited Speaker: Elliot Kaye, Chair, U.S Consumer Product Safety Comm. The Importance of Human Factors Expertise in Consumer Product Safety SF2 – Autonomy and Trust STUDENT FORUM Wednesday, September 21, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Georgetown East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Anthony Baker, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; Cochair: Cheryl Johnson, Naval Air Warfare Center Training Systems Div. 26 1. W. G. Volante, Tracy L. Sanders, D. Dodge, V. A. Yerdon, and Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central Florida, Specifying Influences That Mediate Trust in Human-Robot Interaction 2. Tracy L. Sanders, U. of Central Florida; Kathryn E. Schafer, U. of Illinois; William G. Volante, Ashley Reardon, and Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central Florida, Implicit Attitudes Toward Robots 3. Madison Sauls, Laura A. Whitlock, and William Leidheiser, Clemson U., The Effect of Emotional Content and Support on Trust in Internet Forum Posts: A Pilot Study 4. Madeleine McCarty, Kelly Funkhouser, Jonathan Zadra, and Frank Drews, U. of Utah, Effects of Auditory Working Memory Tasks While Switching Between Autonomous and Manual Driving 5. Prerana Rane, Hyungil Kim, Juan Lopez Marcano, and Joseph L. Gabbard, Virginia Tech, Virtual Road Signs: Augmented Reality Driving Aid for Novice Drivers ST2 – Distraction and Mitigation SURFACE TRANSPORTATION Wednesday, September 21, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Fairchild (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Clive D’Souza, U. of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Cochair: Bochen Jia, U. of Michigan, Dearborn 1. Joonbum Lee, Bruce Mehler, Bryan Reimer, and Joseph F. Coughlin, Massachusetts Inst. of Technology, Sensation Seeking and Drivers’ Glance Behavior While Engaging in a Secondary Task 2. Ja Young Lee, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Joonbum Lee, MIT Age Lab; John D. Lee, U. of Wisconsin-Madison, A Visual Search Model for In-Vehicle Interface Design 3. Liberty Hoekstra-Atwood, Huei-Yen Winnie Chen, and Birsen Donmez, U. of Toronto, Driving Under Involuntary Distraction and Varied Perceptual Loads 4. Maryam Merrikhpour and Birsen Donmez, U. of Toronto, Toward Mitigating Teenagers’ Distracted-Driving Behaviors: Comparison of Real-Time and Post-Drive Feedback in a Simulator Study 5. Jeanne Xie, Huei-Yen Winnie Chen, and Birsen Donmez, U. of Toronto, Gaming to Safety: Exploring Feedback Gamification for Mitigating Driver Distraction T3 – Training Effectiveness and Return on Investment: Perspectives From Military, Training, and Industry Communities TRAINING Wednesday, September 21, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Jason Moss, U.S. Army Research Lab Panelists: Jay A. Brimstin, U.S. Army Maneuver Center of Excellence; Roberto Champney, Design Interactive, Inc.; Arwen H. DeCostanza, U.S. Army Research Lab; J. D. Fletcher, Inst. for Defense Analyses; Gregory Goodwin, U.S. Army Research Lab WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 Wednesday, September 21 5:30–7:00 p.m. Student Reception 5:30–6:30 p.m. International Terrace (Terrace Level) Forensics Professional Group Networking/Business Meeting and Reception 4:30–5:30 p.m. Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Health Care Networking/Business Meeting and Reception 5:30–6:30 p.m. Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Early-Career Professionals Reception 5:30–7:00 p.m. Gunston (Terrace Level) Human Performance Modeling Networking/Business Meeting 5:30–6:30 p.m. Fairchild (Terrace Level) Wednesday, September 21 3:30−9:30 p.m. Technical Group Networking/ Business Meetings Individual Differences in Performance Networking/ Business Meeting 3:30–4:30 p.m. Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Internet/Computer Systems Networking/Business Meeting 4:30–5:30 p.m. Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Aerospace Systems Networking/Business Meeting and Reception 3:30−5:30 p.m. Jefferson West (Concourse Level) Augmented Cognition Networking/Business Meeting 3:30−5:15 p.m. Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making Networking/ Business Meeting and Reception 3:30−5:15 p.m. Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Communications Networking/Business Meeting 3:30−4:30 p.m. Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Computer Systems/Internet Networking/Business Meeting and Reception 4:30–5:30 p.m. Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Education Networking/Business Meeting and Breakfast 7:00–8:30 a.m. Gunston East (Terrace Level) Environmental Design/Macroergonomics Networking/ Business Meeting and Reception 3:45−5:00 p.m. Fairchild (Terrace Level) Macroergonomics/Environmental Design Networking/ Business Meeting and Reception 3:45-5:00 p.m. Fairchild (Terrace Level) Occupational Ergonomics Networking/Business Meeting and Reception 4:30–6:00 p.m. Off site Perception & Performance Networking/Business Meeting 4:00–6:00 p.m. Georgetown East (Concourse Level) Product Design Networking/Business Meeting 3:30–4:30 p.m. Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Safety Networking/Business Meeting 5:30–6:30 p.m. Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Surface Transportation Networking/Business Meeting and Reception 5:30–9:30 p.m. Off site Test & Evaluation Networking/Business Meeting 5:30–6:30 p.m. Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Virtual Environments Networking/Business Meeting 3:00–4:00 p.m. Georgetown East (Concourse Level) WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 27 TH U R SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 2 T HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 2 Thursday, September 22 8:30–10:00 a.m. AS2 – Aviation Hodgepodge AEROSPACE SYSTEMS Thursday, September 22, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Amy R. Pritchett, Georgia Tech; Cochair: Navaneethan Sivagnanasundaram, Wichita State U. 1. Miwa Hayashi, NASA Ames Research Center; Victoria L. Dulchinos, San Jose State U. Foundation, Cardiac-Activity Measures for Assessing Airport Ramp-Tower Controller’s Workload 2. Dennis B. Beringer, FAA Civil Aerospace Medical Inst., An Exploratory Evaluation of General Aviation Pilot Performance and Preferences Using Synthetic Vision Displays for Approaches and Missed Approaches in Flat and Challenging Terrain 3. Arik-Quang V. Dao, James R. Parkinson, and Steven J. Landry, Purdue U., Identifying Human-Machine Interaction Problems in Continuous-State Data 4. Kevin Monk, NASA; Zachary Roberts, San Jose State U., UAS Pilot Evaluations of Suggestive Guidance on Detect-and-Avoid Displays CE6 – Trust in Automation COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Thursday, September 22, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Linda Pierce, Federal Aviation Admin.; Cochair: Jing Chen, New Mexico State U. 1. Xi Jessie Yang, U. of Michigan; Christopher D. Wickens, Alion Science & Technology; Katja Hölttä-Otto, Aalto U., How Users Adjust to Trust in Automation: Contrast Effect and Hindsight Bias 2. Ryan W. Wohleber, U. of Central Florida; Gloria L. Calhoun and Gregory J. Funke, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Heath A. Ruff, Infoscitex Corp.; C.-Y. Peter Chiu, U. of Cincinnati; Jinchao Lin and Gerald Matthews, U. of Central Florida, The Impact of Automation Reliability and Operator Fatigue on Performance and Reliance 3. Melissa A. Smith, M. Mowafak Allaham, and Eva Wiese, George Mason U., Trust in Automated Agents Is Modulated by the Combined Influence of Agent and Task Type 4. Carl J. Pearson, Allaire K. Welk, and Christopher B. Mayhorn, North Carolina State U., In Automation We Trust? Identifying Varying Levels of Trust in Human and Automated Information Sources 5. Katherine Volz, Euijung Yang, Rachel Dudley, Elizabeth Lynch, Maria Dropps, and Michael C. Dorneich, Iowa State U., An Evaluation of Cognitive Skill Degradation in Information Automation 28 CE7 – Cyberspace Operations and the People Who Perform Them COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Thursday, September 22, 8:30–10:00 a.m. International West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Stoney Trent, U.S. Cyber Command; Cochair: Robert Hoffman, Inst. for Human and Machine Cognition Panelists: Tony Leota, Robert Frost, and Danielle Gonzalez, Cyber National Mission Force E3 – Fork in the Road: Deciding Between Academia and Industry EDUCATION Thursday, September 22, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Fairchild (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Nicholas Kelling, U. of Houston-Clear Lake Panelists: Ryan Z. Amick, Lockheed Martin; Gregory M. Corso, Morehead State U.; Christy Harper, Hewlett-Packard; Andrew Muddimer, Workplace Sense; S. Camille Peres, Texas A&M U. HC5 – Usability and Design in Health Care HEALTH CARE; COSPONSORED BY MACROERGONOMICS Thursday, September 22, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: SQ Yin, Changi General Hospital Singapore; Cochair: Bethany Lowndes, Mayo Clinic 1. Amro Abdelrahman, Mayo Clinic; Denny Yu, Purdue U.; Tara Cohen, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; M. Susan Hallbeck and Sandra Woolley, Mayo Clinic, Comparison of Provider Experience With Two Patient Examination Tables 2. Charlotte Leape, Allan Fong, and Raj M. Ratwani, MedStar Health, Heuristic Usability Evaluation of Wearable Mental State Monitoring Sensors for Health-Care Environments 3. Alexandra Doggett, Dustin T. Weiler, and Jason J. Saleem, U. of Louisville, A Comparative Usability Study of Independent Web-Based Personal Health Records 4. Jason J. Saleem, U. of Louisville; Jennifer Herout and Nancy R. Wilck, Veterans Health Admin., Function-Specific Design Principles for the Electronic Health Record 5. Carolyn M. Sommerich, Alex S. Pires, Steven A. Lavender, Elizabeth B.-N. Sanders, Kevin D. Evans, Jing Li, and Emily S. Patterson, Ohio State U., Architects’ and Interior Designers’ Perspectives on Hospital Patient Rooms Designed by the People Who Work in These Rooms THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 TH U R SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 2 T HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 2 HC6 – Advanced Measurement Techniques in Health Care HEALTH CARE Thursday, September 22, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Denny Yu, Purdue U.; Cochair: William Muto, Abbott Labs 1. Wil-Johneen Ardoin, W. Sloane Hoyle, Oluwatosin A. Bewaji, Thomas K. Ferris, and S. Camille Peres, Texas A&M U.; M. Susan Hallbeck and Revelee Kaplan, Mayo Clinic; Peter A. Brady, Mayo Clinic, Real-Time Remote Physiological Monitoring: The Role of Communication in Three Paradigms of Inpatient Care 2. Scott M. Betza, Katherina A. Jurewicz, David M. Neyens, and Sara Lu Riggs, Clemson U.; James H. Abernathy and Scott T. Reeves, Medical U. of South Carolina, Anesthesia Maintenance and Vigilance: Examining Task-Switching 3. Mary Yovanoff and David Pepley, Pennsylvania State U.; Katelin Mirkin, Penn State Hershey Medical Center; Jason Moore, Pennsylvania State U.; David Han, Penn State Hershey Medical Center; Scarlett Miller, Pennsylvania State U., Improving Medical Education: Simulating Changes in Patient Anatomy Using Dynamic Haptic Feedback 4. Da Tao and Fenglian Shao, Shenzhen U.; Shuang Liu, China Inst. of Marine Technology & Economy; Tieyan Wang, Xi’an Polytechnic U.; Xingda Qu, Shenzhen U., Predicting Factors of Consumer Acceptance of Health Information Technologies: A Systematic Review 5. Tiffany Tong, Mark Chignell, and Mary C. Tierney, U. of Toronto; Marie-Josée Sirois, Centre Hospitalier Univer sitaire de Québec; Judah Goldstein, Nova Scotia Health Authority; Marcel Émond, Université Laval; Kenneth Rockwood, Dalhousie U.; Jacques Lee, Sunnybrook Research Inst., Tablet-Based Frailty Assessments in Emergency Care for Older Adults I1/CS – Security/Web Page Design INTERNET; COSPONSORED BY COMPUTER SYSTEMS Thursday, September 22, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Lara Cheng, Purdue U.; Cochair: Courtney Johnson, Google 1. Olga A. Zielinska, Allaire K. Welk, Christopher B. Mayhorn, and Emerson Murphy-Hill, North Carolina State U., A Temporal Analysis of Persuasion Principles in Phishing Emails 2. Yee-Yin Choong and Kristen K. Greene, National Inst. of Standards and Technology, What’s a Special Character, Anyway? Effects of Ambiguous Terminology in Password Rules 3. Steffen Werner, Christopher Hauck, and Marshall Masingale, U. of Idaho, Password Entry Times for Recognition-Based Graphical Passwords 4. Jacklin Stonewall and Michael C. Dorneich, Iowa State U., A Process for Evaluating the Gender and Professionalism of Web Design Elements 5. Marc Resnick (deceased); William Albert, and Yunzhi Huang, Bentley U., The Attention-Grabbing Salience of Viscerally Engaging Images ME3 – Macroergonomics Across Domains MACROERGONOMICS Thursday, September 22, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Cardozo (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Christiane Schubert, Loma Linda U.; Cochair: Abigail Wooldridge, U. of Wisconsin-Madison 1. Yushi Yang, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; A. Joy Rivera, Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin, A Qualitative Obser vational Study in Pediatric ICUs: The Use of Hands-Free Device for Interruptions 2. Sara Pazell and Robin Burgess-Limerick, U. of Queensland; Tim Horberry, Monash U., Application of Functional Resonance Analysis Method to Sustain Human-Centered Design Practice in Road Construction 3. Nita Lewis Shattuck, Lawrence G. Shattuck, and Panagiotis Matsangas, Naval Postgraduate School, Combat Effec tiveness and Sleep Patterns in U.S. Marines 4. Nita Lewis Shattuck and Panagiotis Matsangas, Naval Postgraduate School, Comparison of the 3/9 and 6/6 Watchstanding Schedules for Crewmembers of a U.S. Navy Destroyer 5. Jia-Hua Lin and Stephen Bao, Washington State Dept. of Labor and Industries, Sit-Stand Workstations: Are They the Solution for Musculoskeletal Stress? OE6 – Biomechanics of the Neck, Back, and Trunk OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS Thursday, September 22, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Maury Nussbaum, Virginia Tech; Cochair: Jeffrey Schiffman, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for Safety 1. Jie Zhou, U. of California, Davis; Xiaopeng Ning, West Virginia U., Comparison of Lumbopelvic Coordination Between Trunk Flexion and Extension 2. Faisal M. Alessa and Xiaopeng Ning, West Virginia U., Lumbar Posture and Tissue Loading During Short-Term Static Posture Holding 3. Mojdeh Pajoutan, U. at Buffalo, SUNY; Ranjana K. Mehta, Texas A&M U.; Lora A. Cavuoto, U. at Buffalo, SUNY, Obesity Effect on Isometric Strength of the Trunk Extensors 4. Kaitlin M. Gallagher and Ethan C. Douglas, U. of Arkansas, Trunk Posture Influences Neck Angle When Reading a Tablet Computer 5. Menekse Salar, Richard F. Sesek, and Mark C. Schall, Jr., Auburn U., The Concavity Index: A Novel Approach for Quantifying Intervertebral Disc Degeneration THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 29 Monday P ROGRAM AT A G LA NC E 7:00−10:00 a.m. Tuesday 8:00−10:00 a.m. PL Opening Plenary Session, International Center 8:30 a.m.−12:00 noon 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon 12:00 noon–1:30 p.m. 1:30 to 3:00 p.m. Morning Workshops 8:30 a.m.−12:00 noon WK1 Fieldwork in Home & Community Settings Lincoln E. All-Day Workshop 9:00 a.m.−4:30 p.m. WK6 WK7 ShadowBox Approach to Cognitive Skills Training Jefferson W. Human-Systems Integration Monroe 10:30 a.m.−12:00 noon 10:30 a.m.−12:00 noon SF1 Student Career and Professional Development Day; Second Half of Teaching Insights Workshop Columbia 9 All-Day Workshops continue AS1 Air Traffic Management, Lincoln E. C1 Improving Communication Systems, Lincoln W. CS1/IGoodGovUX, Monroe GS1 Recent Trends in HSI, Columbia 9 ME1 Boundaries in Health Care, Columbia 12 OE1 Research to Practice: Practitioner Perspective, Jefferson E. PP1 Elements of Human Performance, Jefferson W. S1 Safety Culture, International W. SD1 Development and Design, Columbia 11 T1 Research Advances, Georgetown E. TE1 Evaluating HSI, Georgetown W. VE1 Me and My VE, Fairchild Morning-Only Workshops continue 12:00 noon−1:30 p.m. 12:00 noon−1:30 p.m. Lunch break Lunch break 1:30−3:00 p.m. 1:30−3:00 p.m. Afternoon Workshops 1:30−5:00 p.m. WK3 Risk Management for HF/E Practitioners Lincoln E. A1Aging, Fairchild GS2 Improving Human Performance (BOHSI), Columbia 9 HC1 Teams in Health Care, Lincoln E. HP1Workload, Monroe OE2 Research to Practice: Academic Perspective, Jefferson E. PD1 User-Centered Product Design Award, Lincoln W. PP2 Auditory & Multimodal Displays, Jefferson W. S2 Warning Signs & Labels, International W. SD2 Modeling & Simulation, Columbia 11 ST1 Automation & Behavior Measures, Columbia 12 T2 LVC Training Fidelity, Georgetown E. TE2 Assessing User Experience, Georgetown W. WK4Cogulator Lincoln W. WK5 Teaching Insights and Success in Academia Georgetown W. 1:30−5:00 p.m. 3:30–5:00 p.m. Evening All-Day Workshops continue Student Career and Professional Development Day continues 3:30−5:00 p.m. PL2 Automation & Driverless Cars, International W. PL3 Deep Space Exploration, Jefferson PL4Cybersecurity, Monroe PL5 Journal Awards Showcase, Lincoln W. Evening Evening National Ergonomics Month Expo 4:45−6:15 p.m. International Terrace Interactive Posters Session and Reception 5:00−6:30 p.m., International Center Opening Reception 6:30−9:30 p.m. Heights Courtyard HFES Annual Business Meeting 6:30−7:00 p.m., Columbia 9 Product Design Technical Group Reception 7:00−9:00 p.m., Off site PROGRAM AT A GLANCE Wednesday Thursday Friday 7:00−8:30 a.m. Education TG Networking/Business Meeting, Gunston E. 8:30−10:00 a.m. 8:30−10:00 a.m. 8:30−10:00 a.m. CE1 UX Design for Unmanned Systems, International W. CS2/I Designing for Privacy, Lincoln W. DEMDemonstrations, International Center E1 HF in the Classroom, Monroe GS3 Consulting on Government Projects, Columbia 9 HC2 Cog Engineering in Health Care, Columbia 11 ME2 ME and Sustainability, Georgetown W. OE3 Task Design & Space Engineering, Jefferson W. PP3Monitoring, Lincoln E. S3 Driving & Safety, Jefferson E. AS2 CE6 CE7 E3 HC5 HC6 I1/CS ME3 OE6 OE7 PD4 S5 SD3 CE12 Attention & Alerts, Columbia 9 CE13 Ethics, Trust & Autonomous Systems, Int’l W. CS5/I User Feedback at Scale, Georgetown W. E7 Reaching the Youth, Cardozo ED3 Sit or Stand? Georgetown E. HC12 Usability in Health IT, Jefferson E. HC13 Patient Work in HF/E, Jefferson W. HP3 State Representation & SA, Fairchild OE12 Fatigue Assessment, Lincoln E. PP6Psychophysics, Lincoln W. ST6 Automation Role in Transportation, Columbia 11 ST7 Multitasking & Safety, Monroe TE5 Assessment Tools & Techniques, Gunston 10:00−11:00 a.m. 10:30 a.m.−12:00 noon 10:30 a.m.−12:00 noon Posters With Fellows, International Center AS3 CE8 E4 ED2 GS4 HC7 HC8 HP2 I2/CS ID1 OE8 PL6 SF3 AC2 AS5 CE14 E8 HC14 HC15 HP4 I5/CS OE13 OE14 ST8 TE6 10:30 a.m.−12:00 noon AC1 Augmented Cognition, Georgetown E. CE2Teamwork, Columbia 9 CE3 From Theory to Operation, International W. CS3/I Guerilla Usability, Lincoln W. E2 Global Perspectives on HF/E, Monroe ED1 Environmental Design in Education, Georgetown W. HC3 Enhancing Provider Performance, Columbia 11 HC4 Advanced Technologies, Jefferson E. PD2 Ergonomic Advances, Lincoln E. VE2 Collection of Virtual Environments, Fairchild Aviation Hodgepodge, Georgetown W. Trust in Automation, Jefferson E. Cyberspace Operations, Interntional W. Academia or Industry? Fairchild Usability & Design, Columbia 11 Advanced Measurement, Columbia 9 Security/Web Design, Lincoln W. ME Across Domains, Cardozo Neck, Back, Trunk, Lincoln E. Computer Vision, Jefferson W. Evaluation Strategies, Georgetown E. Safety Potpourri, Monroe Technical & Managerial Factors, Gunston USA Mishaps, Monroe Context-Based Decision Support, International W. HF Applications in Education, Fairchild ED Potpourri, Gunston Multitask Performance, Columbia 9 Cognitive Support, Columbia 11 Medical Alarms, Jefferson E. Human Performance Modeling, Georgetown E. Gaps in Cyber Defense, Lincoln W. Orienting & Navigating Tasks, Cardozo NIOSH Lifting Equation Part 1, Jefferson W. Conversation with Dan Mote, Lincoln E. Student Research, Georgetown W. 12:00 noon−1:30 p.m. Aging TG Networking/Business Meeting, Gunston W. System Development TG Networking/Bus. Mtg., Off site 12:00 noon−1:30 p.m. 1:30−3:00 p.m. 1:30−3:00 p.m. CE4 CE5 CS4/I OE4 OE5 PD3 PP4 S4 SF2 ST2 T3 CE9 CE10 E5 FP1 HC9 I3/CS ID2 OE9 PP5 SF4 ST3 ST4 TE3 Expert Decision Making, Columbia 9 Is fNIRS Appropriate? International W. Resnick Best Paper Competition, Lincoln W. Ergonomics Research Funding, Jefferson W. Risk of Vibration, Columbia 11 Influences on Design & Usability, Lincoln E. Vigilance & Fatigue, Monroe Arnold Small Lecture, Jefferson E. Autonomy & Trust, Georgetown E. Distraction & Mitigation, Fairchild Training Effectiveness & ROI, Georgetown W. Gathering Data from Novices, Georgetown E. Improving Air Traffic Control, Monroe Prediction & Decision Making, Columbia 9 Future of HF Education, Cardozo Promoting Patient Safety, International W. Bringing Safety II to Health Care, Jefferson E. Model-Based Assessment, Fairchild Touch/Mouse Input, Lincoln W. Occupational Ergonomics, Lincoln E. Ergonomics of Aging & Obesity, Jefferson W. Teen Drivers, Columbia 11 Voice-Based In-Vehicle Interfaces, Georgetown W. Lunch break Interruptions & Workload, International W. Simulations & Microworlds, Columbia 9 Education of Future HF Professionals, Fairchild Mock Trial, Lincoln E. HF in the Wild, Columbia 11 Mobile Interfaces, Lincoln W. ID in Performance, Cardozo NIOSH Lifting Equation Part 2, Jefferson W. Visual Attention & Search, Jefferson E. Aging & Health Care, Georgetown W. Workload & Stress, Monroe Perception & Performance, Georgetown E. Measuring Performance, Gunston 3:00−9:30 p.m. 3:30−5:00 p.m. Technical Group Networking/Business Meetings AS4 CE11 E6 FP2 HC10 HC11 I4/CS OE10 OE11 SF5 ST5 TE4 VE3 HF in the U.S. Military, Monroe Politeness in HMI, International W. Diversity Task Force, Fairchild Forensics Issues, Lincoln E. Future of Cancer Care, Columbia 9 FDA & Usability Testing Ethics, Columbia 11 Usage Analysis, Lincoln W. Caregiver Health Risk, Jefferson W. MSDs and Performance, Jefferson E. Measuring SA, Georgetown W. Training & Performance, Georgetown E. Marksmanship as a Task, Gunston Electronic Sports, Cardozo 5:30 to 7:00 p.m. Student Reception 5:30–6:30 p.m. International Terrace Early Career Professionals Reception 5:30–7:00 p.m. Gunston PROGRAM AT A GLANCE Key to Abbreviations Used in This Program AS Aerospace Systems AAging AC Augmented Cognition CE Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making CCommunications CS Computer Systems DEMDemonstrations EEducation ED Environmental Design FP Forensics Professional GS General Sessions HC Health Care HP Human Performance Modeling ID Individual Differences in Performance IInternet MEMacroergonomics OE Occupational Ergonomics (formerly Industrial Ergonomics) PL Plenary Session PP Perception & Performance PD Product Design POS Posters & Demonstrations SSafety SS Special Sessions SF Student Forum ST Surface Transportation SD System Development TE Test & Evaluation TTraining VE Virtual Environments WKWorkshops TH U R SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 2 T HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 2 OE7 – Computer Vision and Occupational Ergonomics OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS Thursday, September 22, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Jefferson West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Robert Radwin, U. of Wisconsin-Madison Panelists: SangHyun Lee, U. of Michigan; Kang Li, Rutgers U.; Max Lieblich, U. of Washington; Byoung-keon Daniel Park, U. of Michigan Transportation Research Inst. 4. Man-Wa Ng and Simon Y. W. Li, Lingnan U., An Analysis of Aircraft Maintenance Incidents Using Psychological and Cognitive Engineering Knowledge 5. Philippa Dodshon and Maureen Hassall, U. of Queensland, Incorporation of Human and Organizational Factors in Incident Investigation Processes − The Practitioner’s Perspective SD3 – Technical and Managerial Factors of System Design and Development SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT PD4 – Evaluation Strategies and Practices PRODUCT DESIGN Thursday, September 22, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Georgetown East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Stephen B. Wilcox, Design Science; Cochair: Jo Rain Jardina, Wichita State U. 1. Manuela Quaresma, Rafael Gonçalves, and Marcela Rodrigues, PUC-Rio U., Contextual Analysis of Strategies and Interaction Motivations With Smartphones in Vehicles 2. Andrew J. Abbate and Ellen J. Bass, Drexel U., A Formal Language for Specifying Visual Interface Signifiers 3. Christopher K. McClernon and Victor S. Finomore, U.S. Air Force Academy; Terence S. Andre, TiER1 Performance Solutions; Forrest S. Jeffery and Oliver N. Myers, U.S. Air Force Academy, Evaluation of Digital Checklists for Command-and-Control Operations 4. William Lansing Porter, Carin Kosmoski, and Rohan Fernando, National Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, A Process for Usability Testing of Lifesaving Equipment Thursday, September 22 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon AS3 – UAS Mishaps S5 – Safety Potpourri AEROSPACE SYSTEMS SAFETY Thursday, September 22, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Monroe (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: H. Harvey Cohen, Error Analysis; Cochair: Jeffrey Muttart, Crash Safety Research Center, LLC 1. Mahiyar F. Nasarwanji, National Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Contributing Factors to Slip, Trip, and Fall Fatalities at Surface Coal and Metal/Nonmetal Mines 2. Natasha A. Batista, Luiz Felipe Bruder Bertuluce Bertani, and Justin G. Young, Kettering U., Handhold Location and Utilization During Bathtub Ingress/Egress and Sit-to-Stand Tasks: A Pilot Study 3. Lauren Reinerman-Jones, U. of Central Florida; Niav Hughes and Amy D’Agostino, U.S. Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren Division, A Comparison of Displays and Associated Workload on Nuclear Power Plant Tasks 30 Thursday, September 22, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Gunston (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Jeffrey A. Thomas, U.S. Army Research Lab; Cochair: Frank C. Lacson, Pacific Science and Engineering Group 1. Angelia Sebok and Brett Walters, Alion Science & Technology, The Identification and Application of Human-System Integration Software Tools to Support the Systems Engineering Lifecycle and the Acquisition Process 2. Colin Corbridge, Defence Science & Technology Lab UK; Mark Anthony, Defence Equipment & Support UK; David McNeish, Defence Science & Technology Lab UK; Gareth Shaw, BAE Systems Defence Information UK, A New UK Defence Standard for Human Factors Integration (HFI) Thursday, September 22, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Monroe (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Scott Scheff Panelists: Alan Hobbs, San Jose State U. Foundation; Linda Connell, NASA Ames Research Center CE8 – Approaches to Context-Based Proactive Decision Support COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Thursday, September 22, 10:30–12:00 noon International West (Concourse Level) Invited Symposium Chair: Wayne W. Zachary, CHI Systems, Inc. 1. Wayne W. Zachary, CHI Systems, Inc.; Eric Vorm, U.S. Navy, Approaches to Context-Based Proactive Decision Support 2. Eugene Santos, Jr., Dartmouth College; Hien Nguyen, U. of Wisconsin-Whitewater; Jacob Russell, Dartmouth College; Joshua Day, Scott Pegelow, and Alexis Greenstreet, U. of Wisconsin-Whitewater, A Framework for Dynamic Context-Centric Commander Decision Support THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 TH U R SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 2 T HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 2 3. Pujitha Mannaru, Balakumar Balasingam, and Krishna Pattipati, U. of Connecticut; Ciara Sibley and Joseph Coyne, U.S. Naval Research Lab, Cognitive Context Detection for Adaptive Automation 4. Joanna Brown, Boston Fusion; Sylvain Bruni and Joseph Bennett, Aptima Inc.; Connie Fournelle, Boston Fusion; Christopher Hanna, Lisa Lucia, and Danielle Ward, Aptima Inc.; Benjamin Woodward, Boston Fusion, Characterizing Mission and User Context for Proactive Decision Support 5. Catherine Inibhunu and Scott Langevin, Uncharted Software, Adaptive Visualization of Complex Networks With FocalPoint: A Context-Aware Level of Details Recommender System E4 – Human Factors Applications in Education EDUCATION Thursday, September 22, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Fairchild (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Frank Lacson, Pacific Science & Engineering Group; Cochair: Nathan Sonnenfeld, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U. 1. Euijung Yang and Michael C. Dorneich, Iowa State U., Evaluation of Etiquette Strategies to Adapt Feedback in Affect-Aware Tutoring 2. Anne M. Sinatra and Robert A. Sottilare, U.S. Army Research Lab; Valerie K. Sims, U. of Central Florida, The Effects of Self-Reference and Context Personalization on Task Performance During Adaptive Instruction 3. Nathan A. Sonnenfeld and Joseph R. Keebler, EmbryRiddle Aeronautical U., A Quantitative Model for Unifying Human Factors With Cognitive Load Theory 4. Märt Reinvee, Estonian U. of Life Sciences; Mati Pääsuke, U. of Tartu, Estonia, Overview of Contemporary Low-Cost sEMG Hardware for Applications in Human Factors and Ergonomics 5. Francis A. Trowbridge, Lawton Pybus, Nicholas Mudrick, and Michelle Taub, North Carolina State U., Development of a Human Factors Methods Blog for an Audience of Game Developers ED2 – Environmental Design Potpourri ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN Thursday, September 22, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Gunston (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Clive R. D’Souza, U. of Michigan; Cochair: Beth Phillips, StraCon Services Group 1. Thomas J. Smith, U. of Minnesota, The Evolution of Design – Models and Modes 2. Martha J. Sanders, Quinnipiac U., Age-Related Changes and Environmental Modifications for Healthy Older Workers in Manufacturing: A Multiple-Case Study 3. Brittany Neilson, Martina I. Klein, Elizabeth Briones, and Curtis Craig, Texas Tech U., The Importance of Water Is in Question: Aquatic Nature Images Do Not Have Significantly Higher Restorativeness Ratings Than Green Nature Images 4. Kelly Kalvelage and Michael C. Dorneich, Iowa State U., Using Human Factors to Establish Occupant Task Lists for Office Building Simulations GS4 – Multitask Performance GENERAL SESSIONS; COSPONSORED BY INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN PERFORMANCE; HUMAN PERFORMANCE MODELING; VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS Thursday, September 22, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Rick Thomas, Georgia Tech 1. Shijing Liu, Amy Wadeson, Na Young Kim, and Chang S. Nam, North Carolina State U., Effects of Working Memory Capacity, Task Switching, and Task Difficulty on Multitasking Performance 2. Stephanie A. Morey, Jason S. McCarley, and Nicole A. Thomas, Flinders U., Unchanging Capacity: Dual-Task Effects on Peripheral Target Detection 3. Richard T. Stone, Peihan Zhong, and Zhouglun Wang, Iowa State U., Distance Perception and Enhancement in Remote Navigation 4. Audrey E. Dorris, Peter M. Quesada, and Jason J. Saleem, U. of Louisville, Effects of Vocal and Instrumental Music on Running HC7 – Cognitive Support and Assistive Technologies HEALTH CARE Thursday, September 22, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Josh Singer, National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare; Cochair: Tina Mirchi, Pacific Science & Engineering Group 1. Jessica G. Dykstra, Danielle Sendelbach, and Linsey M. Steege, U. of Wisconsin-Madison, Fatigue in Float Nurses: Patient, Nurse, Task, and Environmental Factors Across Unit Work Systems 2. Estrella Paterson and Penelope Sanderson, U. of Queensland; Neil Paterson, Lady Cilento Children’s Hospital; David Liu, U. of Queensland; Robert Loeb, U. of Arizona, The Effect of a Secondary Task on Identification Accuracy of Oxygen Saturation Ranges Using an Enhanced Pulse Oximetry Sonification: A Laboratory Study 3. Anna Hickling, Penelope Sanderson, and Birgit Brecknell, U. of Queensland; Robert Loeb, U. of Arizona, Using Earcons to Monitor Multiple Patients THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 31 TH U R SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 2 T HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 2 HC8 – Current Issues With Medical Alarms HEALTH CARE Thursday, September 22, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Invited Symposium Chair: Judy Edworthy, Plymouth U.; Cochair: Carryl Baldwin, George Mason U. 1. Judy Edworthy, Plymouth U.; Carryl L. Baldwin, George Mason U., Medical Audible Alarms and IEC 60601-1-8 2. Matthew L. Bolton, U. at Buffalo, SUNY; Bassam Hasanain and Andrew D. Boyd, U. of Illinois at Chicago; Judy Edworthy, Plymouth U., Using Model-Checking to Detect Masking in IEC 60601-1-8-Compliant Alarm Configurations 3. Judy Edworthy and Scott Reid, Plymouth U.; Siné McDougall, Bournemouth U.; Jonathan Edworthy and Stephanie Hall, Plymouth U., The Design and Testing of Novel IEC 60601-1-8 Audible Alarms 4. Michael F. Rayo, Ohio State U., Design Considerations for Redesigning IEC 60101-1-8 Alarms for Mobile Devices 5. Joseph Schlesinger, Vanderbilt U. Medical Center, Utilizing Multisensory Integration to Improve Monitoring in the ICU HP2 – Human Performance Modeling HUMAN PERFORMANCE MODELING Thursday, September 22, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Georgetown East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Michael Miller, U.S. Air Force Inst. of Technology 1. Linda L. M. Bossi, Defence Research and Development Canada; Monica L. H. Jones, U. of Michigan; Alison Kelly and David W. Tack, HumanSystems Inc., A Preliminary Investigation of the Effect of Protective Clothing Weight, Bulk, and Stiffness on Combat Mobility Course Performance 2. Colin F. Mackenzie, Darcy Watts, Rajan Patel, Shiming Yang, George Hagegeorge, Evan Garofalo, Peter F. Hu, and Adam Puche, U. of Maryland School of Medicine; Valerie Shalin, Wright State U.; Kristy Pugh, Guinevere Granite, Lynn G. Stansbury, and Stacy Shackelford, U. of Maryland School of Medicine; Samuel Tisherman, U. of Maryland Medical Center, Sensor-Free Computer-Vision Hand-Motion Entropy and Video Analysis of Technical Performance During Open Surgery on Fresh Cadavers: Report of Methodology and Analysis 3. Halimahtun M. Khalid and Liew Wei Shiung, Damai Sciences; Parham Nooralishani and Zeeshan Rasool, U. of Malaya; Martin G. Helander, Damai Sciences; Loo Chu Kiong and Chin Ai-Vyrn, U. of Malaya, Exploring Psychophysiological Correlates to Trust: Implications for Human-Robot-Human Interaction 4. David E. Kieras and Gregory H. Wakefield, U. of Michigan; Douglas S. Brungart, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center; Brian D. Simpson, U.S. Air Force Research Lab, An EPIC Cognitive-Architectural Account of Spatial Separation Effects in Two-Channel Listening Tasks 32 I2/CS – Addressing Human Factors Gaps in Cyber Defense INTERNET; COSPONSORED BY COMPUTER SYSTEMS, COMMUNICATIONS Thursday, September 22, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Alex Vieane, Colorado State U.; Cochair: Kelly Hale, Design Interactive, Inc. Panelists: Gregory J. Funke, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Robert Gutzwiller, Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center Pacific; Vincent Mancuso, MIT Lincoln Lab; Ben D. Sawyer, MIT AgeLab; Christopher D. Wickens, Colorado State U. ID1 – Individual Differences in Orienting and Navigating Tasks INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN PERFORMANCE Thursday, September 22, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Cardozo (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Andy Dattel, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; Cochair: Rachel Phillips, Chowan U. 1. Jinchao Lin, Gerald Matthews, and Ryan W. Wohleber, U. of Central Florida; C.-Y. Peter Chiu, U. of Cincinnati; Gloria L. Calhoun and Gregory J. Funke, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Heath A. Ruff, Infoscitex Corp., Automation Reliability and Other Contextual Factors in Multi-UAV Operator Selection 2. Shih-Yi Chien and Michael Lewis, U. of Pittsburgh; Katia Sycara, Carnegie Mellon U.; Jyi-Shane Liu, National ChengChi U.; Asiye Kumru, Ozyegin U., Relation Between Trust Attitudes Toward Automation, Hofstede’s Cultural Dimensions, and Big Five Personality Traits 3. Hongting Li, Zhejiang Science & Technology U.; Yiqi Zhang and Changxu Wu, U. at Buffalo, SUNY; Dan Mei, Zhejiang Science & Technology U., Individual Differences in Orienting and Navigating Tasks When Using North-Up and Track-Up Electronic Maps 4. Teairra M. Brown and Joseph L. Gabbard, Virginia Tech, Utilization of Cognitive Styles and Personalized Augmented Reality to Advance K-12 Learning Outcomes OE8 – Panel Discussion in Honor of Dr. Tom Waters – The NIOSH Lifting Equation – Part 1: A Review of Its Validation and Implications for Interpretation OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS Thursday, September 22, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Jefferson West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Robert R. Fox, General Motors; Cochair: Wayne Maynard, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for Safety Panelists: Jay M. Kappellusch, U. of Wisconsin-Milwaukee; W. Gary Allread, Ohio State U.; Jim R. Potvin, McMaster U.; Jeffrey E. Fernandez, JF Assoc., Inc. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 TH U R SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 2 T HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 2 PL6 – Past President’s Forum: A Conversation With National Academy of Engineering President Dan Mote: Human Factors and Ergonomics Contribution to the NAE Grand Challenges GENERAL SESSIONS Thursday, September 22, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Plenary Chair: Andrew S. Imada, A. S. Imada Assoc. Invited Speaker: C. D. Mote, Jr., National Academy of Engineering SF3 – Student Research Medley STUDENT FORUM Thursday, September 22, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Eva Rodriguez, U. of Central Florida; Cochair: Brittany Neilson, Texas Tech U. 1. Jayde M. King, Yolanda Ortiz, and Beth L. Blickensderfer, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U., ATC Weather Knowledge & Skills: A Contributor to the General Aviation Weather Problem? 2. Emily C. Anania, Joseph R. Keebler, Katlin M. Anglin, and Jason P. Kring, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U., Using the Cooperative Board Game Pandemic to Study Teamwork 3. Ali Momen, Catholic U. of America; M. Mowafak Allaham, George Mason U.; Marc M. Sebrechts, Catholic U. of America, Virtual Agents as a Support for FeedbackBased Learning 4. Drew M. Morris, Robert B. Powell, and June J. Pilcher, Clemson U., Antarctica: Cold-Stress Risks During Occupational and Leisure Activities 5. R. Schnittker, S. D. Marshall, Tim Horberry, K. L. Young, and G. Lintern, Monash U., Examination of Anesthetic Practitioners’ Decisions for the Design of a Cognitive Tool for Airway Management Thursday, September 22 1:30–3:00 p.m. CE9 – Interruptions and Workload COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Thursday, September 22, 1:30–3:00 p.m. International West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Birsen Donmez, U. of Toronto; Cochair: Yueqing Li, Lamar U. 1. Cyrus K. Foroughi, George Mason U.; Nicole E. Werner, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Deborah A. Boehm-Davis, George Mason U., Are Individuals Sensitive to Changes in Performance When Interrupted? 2. Chiara Santomauro and Penelope Sanderson, U. of Queensland, Conducting Comparable Research in Representative Worlds: An Interruptions Case Study 3. Michael David Wilson, Simon Farrell, Troy A. W. Visser, and Shayne Loft, U. of Western Australia, On the Nature of Interruptions in Complex Dynamic Tasks 4. Julia L. Wright, Jessie Y. C. Chen, and Michael J. Barnes, U.S. Army Research Lab; Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central Florida, Agent Reasoning Transparency’s Effect on Operator Workload 5. Nathan Aguiar and Kevin Zish, George Mason U.; J. Malcolm McCurry, Harris Corp.; J. Gregory Trafton, U.S. Naval Research Lab, Interruptions Reduce Performance Across All Levels of Signal Detection When Estimations of Confidence Are Highest CE10 – Simulations and Microworlds COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Thursday, September 22, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Susan Kirschenbaum, U.S. Naval Undersea Warfare Center; Cochair: Shelby Long, Old Dominion U. 1. Timothy J. Wright and Siby Samuel, U. of MassachusettsAmherst; Avinoam Borowsky, Ben-Gurion U. of the Negev; Shlomo Zilberstein and Donald L. Fisher, U. of Massachusetts-Amherst, Experienced Drivers Are Quicker to Achieve Situation Awareness Than Inexperi enced Drivers in Situations of Transfer of Control Within a Level 3 Autonomous Environment 2. Prashanth Rajivan, Emmanouil Konstantinidis, Noam Ben-Asher, and Cleotilde Gonzalez, Carnegie Mellon U., Categorization of Events in Security Scenarios: The Role of Context and Heuristics 3. François Vachon and Benoît R. Vallières, Université Laval; Joel Suss, Wichita State U.; Jean-Denis Thériault and Sébastien Tremblay, Université Laval, The CSSS Micro world: A Gateway to Understanding and Improving CCTV Security Surveillance THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 33 TH U R SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 2 T HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 2 4. Wayne C. W. Giang, Lavinia Hui, and Birsen Donmez, U. of Toronto; Mahvareh Ahghari and Russell D. MacDonald, Ornge, Dispatch Decision Making in an Air Medical Transport System 5. Katherine E. Walker, David D. Woods, and Michael F. Rayo, Ohio State U., Multiple Systemic Contributors Versus Root Cause: Learning From a NASA Near Miss E5 – Education of Future Human Factors Professionals EDUCATION Thursday, September 22, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Fairchild (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Esa Rantanen, Rochester Inst. of Technology Panelists: Deborah A. Boehm-Davis, George Mason U.; Linda Boyle, U. of Washington; Daniel Hannon, Tufts U.; John D. Lee, U. of Wisconsin-Madison FP1 – Mock Trial: A Demonstration of Human Factors Professionals Testifying on a Children’s Transportation Safety Product FORENSICS PROFESSIONAL Thursday, September 22, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Alternative Format Chair: Ilene Zackowitz, Vredenburgh & Assoc., Inc.; Cochair: David Lenorovitz, Lenpro Services, Inc. Testifying for the plaintiff: Stephanie Borzendowski, Applied Building Sciences, Inc.; Valerie Rice, General Ergonomics Counsel for the plaintiff: Cheryl Feeley and Julia Milewski, Holland & Knight Counsel for the defense: Jessica Farmer, Holland & Knight Trial commentator: Lynn Calkins, Holland & Knight HC9 – Human Factors in the Wild: Getting the Human Factors Foot in the Health-Care Door HEALTH CARE Thursday, September 22, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Adjhaporn Khunlertkit, Johns Hopkins Medicine Panelists: A. Joy Rivera, Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin; Shanqing (SQ) Yin, KK Women’s & Children’s Hospital, Singapore; Catherine Dulude, Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario; Susan Harkness Regli, U. of Pennsylvania Health System; Laurie Wolf, Barnes-Jewish Hospital 34 I3/CS – Mobile Interfaces INTERNET; COSPONSORED BY COMPUTER SYSTEMS Thursday, September 22, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Robert Pastel, Michigan Technological U.; Cochair: Ken Ohnemus, Red Moon Interactive 1. Jing Chen, New Mexico State U.; Huangyi Ge, Robert W. Proctor, Ninghui Li, and Weining Yang, Purdue U., Display of Major Risk Categories for Mobile Apps 2. Jennifer Ismirle, Ian C. O’Bara, Sarah J. Swierenga, and James E. Jackson, Michigan State U., Touchscreen Voting Interface Design for Persons With Disabilities: Insights From Usability Evaluation of Mobile Voting Prototype 3. Jonathan R. Zadra, U. of Utah; Jeremy Gleed, Salt Lake City Veterans Health Administration; Frank A. Drews, U. of Utah, Handheld EHRs: Choosing a Mobile Device 4. Sean T. Hayes, Charleston Southern U.; Julie A. Adams, Vanderbilt U., Device Motion via Head Tracking for Mobile Interaction 5. Han Zhang and Alan Hedge, Cornell U., The Effect of Temperature Change Rate on User Thermal Sensation and Its Implication for Tablet Computer Heat Dissipation Design ID2 – Individual Differences in Performance INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN PERFORMANCE Thursday, September 22, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Cardozo (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Anne Sinatra, U.S. Army Research Lab; Cochair: Andy Dattel, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U. 1. Caroline Crump, David Cades, Benjamin D. Lester, Scott Reed, Brandon Barakat, Laurene Milan, and Douglas Young, Exponent Failure Analysis Associates Inc., Differing Perceptions of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) 2. Soo-Chan Jee, Seoul National U.; Ye Lim Rhie, Republic of Korea Air Force Headquarters; Minjee Kim, Yong Min Kim, Sung Hee Ahn, and Myung Hwan Yun, Seoul National U., Use of Hand Biometric Information in Gender Identification: Integration of Anthropometric and Electromyographic Data 3. Mark C. Schall, Jr., Rong Huangfu, Sean Gallagher, Jerry Davis, and Richard Sesek, Auburn U.; Claudia Escobar, Hyundai-Kia America Technical Center, Inc., Application of Inertial Measurement Units to Assess Vehicle Ingress and Egress Characteristics 4. James R. Bowden and Christina F. Rusnock, U.S. Air Force Inst. of Technology, Influences of Task Management Strategy on Performance and Workload for Supervisory Control THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 TH U R SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 2 T HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 2 OE9 – In Honor of Dr. Tom Waters – The NIOSH Lifting Equation – Part 2: Exploring Proposed Extensions and Beyond OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS Thursday, September 22, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Jefferson West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Robert R. Fox, General Motors; Cochair: Rammohan V. Maikala, Providence Regional Medical Center Panelists: Enrico Occhipinti and Daniela Colombini, Research Unit, EPMIES; Enrique Alvarez-Casado, Centro de Ergonomía Aplicada; Sean Gallagher, Auburn U. PP5 – Visual Attention, Eye Movements, and Search PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE 4. Shraddhaa Narasimha, Sruthy Agnisarman, Kapil Chalil Madathil, and Anand K. Gramopadhye, Clemson U.; Brandon Welch and James McElligott, Medical U. of South Carolina, An Investigation of the Usability Issues of Home-Based Video Telemedicine Systems with Geriatric Patients 5. Mina Ostovari, Denny Yu, Shan Xie, Qing Ye, and Bhagyashree Katare, Purdue U.; Mohammad Adibuzzaman, and Kenneth J. Musselman, Regenstrief Center for Healthcare Engineering; Roshanak Nateghi, Cleveland G. Shields, and Yuehwern Yih, Purdue U., Bridging the Gap Between Population Needs and Barriers Into Onsite Clinic Use ST3 – Workload and Stress Thursday, September 22, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Kelly Steelman, Michigan Tech U.; Cochair: Nicole Karpinsky, Old Dominion U. 1. Matthew Ward, Amit Barde, and Paul N. Russell, U. of Canterbury; Mark Billinghurst, U. of South Australia; William S. Helton, U. of Canterbury, Visual Cues to Reorient Attention From Head-Mounted Displays 2. Allan Fong, Daniel Hoffman, and Raj M. Ratwani, MedStar Health, Making Sense of Mobile Eye-Tracking Data in the Real World: A Human-in-the-Loop Analysis Approach 3. Robyn Sun Kim, Benjamin D. Lester, Jeremy Schwark, David Cades, Rami Hashish, Helene Moorman, and Douglas Young, Exponent Failure Analysis Associates Inc., Gaze Behavior During Curb Approach: The Effect of Mobile Device Use 4. Justin M. Ericson, Duke U.; Stephen R. Mitroff, George Washington U.; Ben Sharpe, Kedlin Co., Long-Term Visual Search: Using Mobile App “Big Data” to Reveal Key Aspects of Experience in Visual Search 5. Kelly S. Steelman and Hannah North, Michigan Techno logical U., Predicting Detection Times With Perceptual Euclidian Distance Thursday, September 22, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Monroe (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Thomas K. Ferris, Texas A&M U.; Cochair: John Gaspar, U. of Iowa 1. William J. Horrey, Mary F. Lesch, and Yulan Liang, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for Safety, Drivers’ Calibration in Self-Evaluated Performance: The Role of Task-Related Workload and Scale Specificity 2. Shiyan Yang, Seyed Armin Raeis Hosseiny, Sahinya Susindar, and Thomas K. Ferris, Texas A&M U., Investigating Driver Sympathetic Arousal Under Short-Term Loads and Acute Stress Events 3. James R. Coleman, Jonna Turrill, Joel M. Cooper, and David L. Strayer, U. of Utah, Cognitive Workload Using Interactive Voice Messaging Systems 4. Spencer C. Castro, Joel M. Cooper, and David L. Strayer, U. of Utah, Validating Two Assessment Strategies for Visual and Cognitive Load in a Simulated Driving Task 5. Ying Wang, Xiang Guo, Yueyan Zhu, and Jianqiao Zhang, Beihang U., Color Block Task: A New Surrogate Secondary Task to Measure the Impact of Drivers’ Incrementally Increased Workload SF4 – Aging and Health Care ST4 – Perception and Performance STUDENT FORUM SURFACE TRANSPORTATION Thursday, September 22, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Emily Anania, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; Cochair: Frank Lacson, Pacific Science and Engineering Group 1. Natalee K. Baldwin and Richard Pak, Clemson U., The Effects of Olfactory Environmental Cues on Prospective Memory 2. Jessica J. Crumely-Branyon and Richard Pak, Clemson U., Older Adults’ Perceptions of Memory Aid Use and Meta-Memory Accuracy: A Focus Group Study 3. Sean A. McGlynn, Denise Geiskkovitch, Tracy L. Mitzner, and Wendy A. Rogers, Georgia Tech, PARO’s StressReduction Potential for Older Adults Thursday, September 22, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Georgetown East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: James Jenness, Westat; Cochair: Fred Feng, U. of Michigan, Ann Arbor 1. Jieun Lee, Makoto Itoh, and Toshiyuki Inagaki, U. of Tsukuba, Effectiveness of Driver Compensation to Avoid Vehicle Collision Under Visual Field Contraction 2. Stacy A. Balk and Steven Jackson, Leidos; Jim Shurbutt, U.S. Federal Highway Admin., Evaluation of New Lane Reduction Markings SURFACE TRANSPORTATION THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 35 TH U R SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 2 T HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 2 3. Gemma J. M. Read, A. Clacy, M. Thomas, M. R. H. Van Mulken, and N. Stevens, U. of the Sunshine Coast; M. G. Lenné and C. M. Mulvihill, Monash U.; N. A. Stanton, U. of Southampton; G. H. Walker, Heriot-Watt U.; K. L. Young, Monash U.; P. M. Salmon, U. of the Sunshine Coast, Evaluation of Novel Urban Rail Level Crossing Designs Using Driving Simulation 4. Darlene E. Edewaard, Drea K. Fekety, and Richard A. Tyrrell, Clemson U., The Conspicuity Benefits of Bicycle Taillights in Daylight E6 – The HFES Diversity Task Force: Advancing the HFES Vision of Inclusion TE3 – The Challenges of Measuring Human Performance in Complex Operational Environments FP2 – Forensics Issues TEST AND EVALUATION; COSPONSORED BY SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT Thursday, September 22, 1:30–3:00 p.m. Gunston (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Pamela Savage-Knepshield, U.S. Army Research Lab; Cochair: David Hullinger, U.S. Army Research Lab Panelists: David Hullinger, U.S. Army Research Lab; Rachael Lund, U.S. Naval Surface Warfare Center; Carol Manning and Linda G. Pierce, U.S. Federal Aviation Admin.; Owen Seely, U.S. Naval Surface Warfare Center; Jeffrey Thomas, U.S. Army Research Lab Thursday, September 22 3:30–5:00 p.m. AS4 – Human Factors and the United States Military: A 75-Year Partnership AEROSPACE SYSTEMS Thursday, September 22, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Monroe (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Chad Tossell, U.S. Air Force Academy Panelists: Victor S. Finomore, U.S. Air Force Academy; Mica R. Endsley, SA Technologies; Christopher D. Wickens, Colorado State U.; Winston R. Bennett, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Benjamin A. Knott, U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research; Christopher K. McClernon, U.S. Air Force Academy CE11 – Politeness in Machine-Human and Human-Human Interaction COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Thursday, September 22, 3:30–5:00 p.m. International West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Joachim Meyer, Tel Aviv U. Panelists: Chris Miller, SIFT; Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central Florida; Ewart J. de Visser, Perceptronics Solutions, Inc.; Michael C. Dorneich, Iowa State U. 36 EDUCATION Thursday, September 22, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Fairchild (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Tonya Smith-Jackson, North Carolina A&T State U. Panelists: Richard Pak, Clemson U.; Kayenda Johnson, CSRA International; Anne Collins McLaughlin, North Carolina State U.; Ericka Rovira, U.S. Military Academy FORENSICS PROFESSIONAL Thursday, September 22, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Joseph Cohen, Error Analysis, Inc. 1. Kenneth Nemire, HFE Consulting LLC, Ratings of the Effectiveness of Warnings on Consumer Paint-Stripper Products: Evaluation by University Students and MTurk Workers of FHSA- and ANSI Z535.4-Formatted Warning Labels 2. Jeffrey W. Muttart and Swaroop Dinakar, Crash Safety Research Center, LLC; Gregory Vandenberg, Vandenberg Collision Analytics; Michael Yosko, Yosko Consulting, LLC, The Influence of Driver Expectation When Recognizing Lighted Targets at Nighttime 3. Hilary Lam and Sayf Gani, Advantage Forensics Inc.; Randy Mawson, Forensic Climatology Consulting Inc.; Jason Young and Erin Potma, Advantage Forensics Inc., A Practical Tool for Ambient Illumination Comparisons at Dusk/Dawn 4. Jeffrey A. Martinn, DSI Consulting, LLC, Applied Human Error Theory: A Police TASER-Confusion Shooting Case Study 5. Stephanie A. Whetsel Borzendowski and Alan O. Campbell, Applied Building Sciences, Inc., The Utility of Mobile Eye-Tracking Technology in the Forensic Analysis of Personal Injury HC10 – The Future of Cancer Care: The Role of Human Factors HEALTH CARE Thursday, September 22, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Elizabeth Lazzara, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U. Panelists: Deborah DiazGranados, Virginia Commonwealth U.; Stephen Taplin, National Cancer Inst.; Mary Lou Smith, Research Advocacy Network; Veronica Chollette, National Cancer Inst.; Shin-Ping Tu, Virginia Commonwealth U.; Brad Hesse, National Cancer Inst. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 F RID AY, SE PT E MB E R 2 3 T HURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 2 HC11 – Will The New FDA Human Factors Guidance Help Curb Ethical Dilemmas in Health-Care Usability Testing? HEALTH CARE Thursday, September 22, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Josh Singer, National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare, MedStar Inst. for Innovation Panelists: Natalie Abts and Lawrence Wolpert, National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare, MedStar Inst. for Innovation; John Gosbee, Red Forest Consulting; Xin Feng, U.S. Food and Drug Admin.; Sara Waxberg McNew, Eli Lilly and Co. I4/CS – Usage Analysis INTERNET; COSPONSORED BY COMPUTER SYSTEMS Thursday, September 22, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Nizar Saqqar, Bold; Cochair: Mallorie Bradlau, Purdue U. 1. Kimberly C. Preusse and Wendy A. Rogers, Georgia Tech, Error Interpretation During Everyday Automation Use 2. Mark E. Becker, Jacob R. Bevitt, and Dick L. Horst, UserWorks, Inc., User Research to Enhance the U.S. Postal Service Web Site 3. Sungryul Park, Jihhyeon Yi, Donghee Choi, Songil Lee, and Gyouhyung Kyung, Ulsan National Inst. of Science and Technology; Byeonghwa Choi, Ja Eun Lee, and Seungbae Lee, Samsung Display, Effects of Display Curvature and Task Duration on Proofreading Task Performance, Visual Fatigue, Visual Discomfort, and Display Satisfaction 4. Brian Peck, Stephen Gilbert, Eliot Winer, and Robert C. Ray, Iowa State U., HomCam: A Wireless 360-Degree Wearable Streaming Camera for Remote Situational Awareness 5. Shelby K. Long and James P. Bliss, Old Dominion U., The Effect of Control Device on Performance in a Robotic Arm Task OE10 – Preventing Our Caregivers From Becoming Patients: Challenges, Successes, and Trends Faced by Hospital Risk Managers and Ergonomists OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS; COSPONSORED BY HEALTH CARE Thursday, September 22, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Jefferson West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Neal Wiggermann, Hill-Rom Panelists: M. Susan Hallbeck, Mayo Clinic; Tamara James, Duke U.; Dee Kumpar, Hill-Rom; Robert Williamson, Ascension Health; Laurie Wolf, BJC Health System OE11 – Musculoskeletal Disorders and Human Performance OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS Thursday, September 22, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Ryan Z. Amick, Lockheed Martin; Cochair: Sean Gallagher, Auburn U. 1. Sean Gallagher and Mark C. Schall, Jr., Auburn U., The Biomechanical Relevance of Stress Range and Mean Stress in the Analysis of Variable Loading on Musculoskeletal Tissues 2. Mohini Dutt, Steven A. Lavender, Carolyn M. Sommerich, and Ajit M. W. Chaudhari, Ohio State U., Relationships Between Lower-Extremity Musculoskeletal Disorders Symptoms and Tibial Acceleration Measures in Distribution Center Workers 3. Ryan Z. Amick, Christopher R. Reid, Linh Q. Vu, Dan Nguyen, Robert Sweet, Shane M. McFarland, and Sudhakar Rajulu, NASA, Preliminary Assessment of Ergonomic Injury Risk Factors in the Extravehicular Mobility Unit Spacesuit Glove 4. Sol I. Lim, Andrea Case, and Clive D’Souza, U. of Michigan, Comparative Analysis of Inertial Sensor to Optical Motion Capture System Performance in Push-Pull Exertion Postures 5. M. F. Barbe, Temple U. School of Medicine; D. L. Xin, U. of Pennsylvania; A. E. Barr-Gillespie, Pacific U.; J. Hadrévi, Umeå U.; M. E. Elliott, Thomas Jefferson U., Sickness Behaviors (Reduced Social Interaction and Pain Behaviors) Are Linked to Inflammatory Mechanisms in a Rat Model of Work-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders SF5 – Measuring Situation Awareness and Internal States STUDENT FORUM Thursday, September 22, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Kate Kapolo, U. of Central Florida; Cochair: David Schuster, San Jose State U. 1. Ashley A. Cain, Tamsyn Edwards, and David Schuster, San Jose State U., A Quantitative Measure for Shared and Complementary Situation Awareness 2. Thomas A. Ulrich and Steffen Werner, U. of Idaho; Ronald L. Boring, Idaho National Lab, Change Detection for Measuring Attention Allocation: A New Approach for Capturing Situation Awareness 3. Anthony L. Baker, Joseph R. Keebler, and Elizabeth L. Blickensderfer, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U., Faster Than Light: Preliminary Review of a Complex Game-Based Testbed 4. William G. Volante, M. Merz, Kimberly Stowers, and Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central Florida, Sleep, Workload, and Boredom: Subject Matter Expert Insights THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 37 TH U R SD AY, SE PT E M B E R 2 2 F RIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 3 5. Dustin T. Weiler and Jason J. Saleem, U. of Louisville, Identifying an Effect of Simulation Role Assignment on Critical Thinking Development in Baccalaureate Nursing Students: A Proof of Concept ST5 – Training and Performance SURFACE TRANSPORTATION Thursday, September 22, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Georgetown East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Tina B. Sayer, Toyota Technical Center; Cochair: Joonbum Lee, Massachusetts Inst. of Technology 1. Craig Schneider, Foroogh Hajiseyedjavadi, and Jingyi Zhang, U. of Massachusetts-Amherst; Matthew R. E. Romoser, Western New England U.; Siby Samuel, Michael Knodler, and Donald L. Fisher, U. of MassachusettsAmherst, Use of Micro-Scenarios to Reduce the Effects of Simulator Sickness in Training Intervention Studies 2. Tracy M. Zafian, Siby Samuel, Jennifer Coppola, and Erin G. O’Neill, U. of Massachusetts-Amherst; Matthew R. E. Romoser, Western New England U.; Donald L. Fisher, U. of Massachusetts-Amherst, On-Road Effectiveness of a Tablet-Based Teen Driver Training Intervention 3. Sheila G. Klauer, Virginia Tech Transportation Inst.; Tina B. Sayer, Toyota Collaborative Safety Research Center; Peter Baynes and Gayatri Ankem, Virginia Tech Transportation Inst., Using Real-Time and Post Hoc Feedback to Improve Driving Safety for Novice Drivers 4. Shiyan Yang and Thomas K. Ferris, Texas A&M U., Measuring Cognitive Efficiency of Novel Speedometer Displays 5. Heishiro Toyoda, Tina B. Sayer, and Josh E. Domeyer, Toyota Technical Center, Applying the Risk Appraisal Model to Following-Distance Feedback and Implications From the Pilot Study VE3 – Exploring Electronic Sports: An Interdisciplinary Approach VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS Thursday, September 22, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Cardozo (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: James Kozachuk, U. of Central Florida Panelists: Cyrus K. Foroughi, George Mason U.; Guo Freeman, U. of Cincinnati TE4 – Marksmanship as a Critical Military Occupational Task: Issues, Approaches and Methods for Optimal Performance and Equipment Design TEST AND EVALUATION; COSPONSORED BY SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT Thursday, September 22, 3:30–5:00 p.m. Gunston (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: K. Blake Mitchell, U.S. Natick Soldier Research, Development and Engineering Center Panelists: Linda L. M. Bossi, Defence Research and Development Canada; William Harper and Gabriella Larkin, U.S. Army Research Lab; Jay A. McNamara, U.S. Army Natick Soldier Research, Development, and Engineering Center; Christopher Palmer, U.S. Naval Special Warfare Command 38 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 F RID AY, SE PT E MB E R 2 3 F RIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 3 Friday, September 23 8:30–10:00 a.m. E7 – Reaching the Youth – Creating Entertaining and Educational HF/E Outreach Activities for Grades K–12 EDUCATION CE12 – Attention and Alerts COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Friday, September 23, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Sylvain Bruni, Aptima, Inc.; Cochair: Jung Kim 1. Cindy Chamberland, Université Laval; Helen M. Hodgetts, Cardiff Metropolitan U.; Benoit R. Vallières, François Vachon, and Sébastien Tremblay, Université Laval, Pip and Pop: When Auditory Alarms Facilitate Visual Change Detection in Dynamic Settings 2. Benjamin A. Clegg and Christopher D. Wickens, Colorado State U., The Relationship Between Individual Differences in Switching Performance and Task Engagement 3. Julie C. Prinet, Yuzhi Wan, and Nadine Sarter, U. of Mich igan, Tactile Spatial Guidance for Collision Avoidance in NextGen Flight Operations 4. Julie C. Prinet, Alexander C. Mize, and Nadine Sarter, U. of Michigan, Triggering and Detecting Attentional Narrowing in Controlled Environments 5. Rebecca Wiczorek, Technische Universität Berlin; Joachim Meyer, Tel Aviv U., Asymmetric Effects of False-Positive and False-Negative Indications on the Verification of Alerts in Different Risk Conditions CE13 – Matters of Ethics, Trust, and Potential Liability for Autonomous Systems COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Friday, September 23, 8:30–10:00 a.m. International West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: J. Christopher Brill, U.S. Army Research Lab Panelists: James P. Bliss, Old Dominion U.; Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central Florida; Dietrich H. Manzey, Technische Universität Berlin; Joachim Meyer, Tel Aviv U.; Alison Vredenburgh, Vredenburgh & Assoc., Inc. CS5/I – User Feedback at Scale: Spotlight on UX Research for Enterprise Systems Friday, September 23, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Cardozo (Terrace Level) Alternative Format Chair: Angela Avera, U. of Houston-Clear Lake Panelists: Michael Merta, Pamela Fournier, Ruben DeLeon, Nicholas J. Kelling, and Steven C. Sutherland, U. of Houston-Clear Lake ED3 – Environment Design: Sit or Stand? ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN Friday, September 23, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Georgetown East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Martha Sanders, Quinnipiac U. 1. Alan Hedge, Cornell U., What Am I Sitting on? User Knowledge of Their Chair Controls 2. Gourab Kar and Alan Hedge, Cornell U., Effects of Sitting and Standing Work Postures on Short-Term Typing Performance and Discomfort 3. Dechristian Barbieri, Federal U. of São Carlos; Divya Srinivasan, Virginia Tech; Svend Erik Mathiassen, U. of Gävle; Ana Beatriz Oliveira, Federal U. of São Carlos, The Effect of Sit-Stand Workstations to Decrease Sedentariness in Office Work: Tests of Two Systems With and Without Automatic Reminders 4. Rachel Marie Cunningham, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U., Technology in Organizations: How Structure and Expectations Have Changed HC12 – Usability in Health IT: Beyond Compliance to Meaningful Design and Assessment HEALTH CARE Friday, September 23, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Ann M. Bisantz, U. at Buffalo, SUNY Panelists: Rollin J. (Terry) Fairbanks, Aaron Zachary Hettinger, and Raj M. Ratwani, MedStar Health; Emily S. Patterson, Ohio State U.; Emilie Roth, Roth Cognitive Engineering COMPUTER SYSTEMS; COSPONSORED BY INTERNET Friday, September 23, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Danielle Smith, Sentier Strategic Resources; Cochair: Ania Rodriguez, Key Lime Interactive Panelists: Steve Fadden, Salesforce; Melissa Meingast, Hewlett Packard Enterprise; Michelle Peterson, Sentier Strategic Resources; Anna Rowe, SolarWinds HC13 – Patient Work as a Maturing Approach Within HF/E: Moving Beyond Traditional Self-Management Applications HEALTH CARE Friday, September 23, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Jefferson West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Rupa Valdez, U. of Virginia Panelists: Richard J. Holden, Indiana U.; Kelly Caine and Kapil Madathil, Clemson U.; Robin Mickelson and Laurie Lovett Novak, Vanderbilt U.; Nicole E. Werner, U. of Wisconsin-Madison FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 39 F RID AY, SE PT E MB E R 2 3 HP3 – State Representation and Situation Awareness in Human Performance Models PP6 – Psychophysics PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE HUMAN PERFORMANCE MODELING Friday, September 23, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Fairchild (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Dario Salvucci, Drexel U. 1. Ehsan B. Khosroshahi and Dario D. Salvucci, Drexel U., A Model of Visual Location Learning 2. Angus H. Rupert, Ben D. Lawson, and Jared E. Basso, U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Lab, Tactile Situation Awareness System: Recent Developments for Aviation 3. Atefeh Katrahmani and Matthew R. E. Romoser, Western New England U.; Siby Samuel, U. of MassachusettsAmherst, Investigating a Noninvasive Method of Measuring the Quality of Latent Hazard Schemas of Novice Teen and Experienced Adult Drivers: A New Perspective Using Traditional Tools 4. Bethany Bracken, Noa Palmon, Lee Kellogg, Seth Elkin-Frankston, and Mike Farry, Charles River Analytics, A Cross-Domain Approach to Designing an Unobtrusive System to Assess Human State and Predict Upcoming Performance Deficits OE12 – Fatigue Assessment and Management OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS; COSPONSORED BY HEALTH CARE Friday, September 23, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Alternative Format Chair: Ranjana Mehta, Texas A&M U.; Cochair: S. Camille Peres, Texas A&M U. 1. Ehsan Rashedi and Maury A. Nussbaum, Virginia Tech, History Dependency of Muscle Strength Recovery From a Fatiguing Intermittent Task 2. Susan E. Kotowski, Joseph Niehaus, Alyssa Ofat, Michael Presnell, Alena Regelski, and Bradley Rockwell, U. of Cincinnati, Effect of Prior Mental or Physical Fatigue on the Biomechanical Response During a Lifting Task 3. Ranjana K. Mehta and S. Camille Peres, Texas A&M U.; Linsey M. Steege, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Jim R. Potvin, Potvin Biomechanics Inc.; Mike Wahl, Definitions Health and Wellness; Laura M. Stanley, Montana State U.; Thomas E. Nesthus, FAA Civil Aerospace Medical Inst., Fatigue Monitoring and Management Across Different Industries 40 Friday, September 23, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: William Kosnik, U.S. Air Force; Cochair: Yusuke Yamani, Old Dominion U. 1. Missie Smith, Valerie Kane, and Joseph L. Gabbard, Virginia Tech; Gary Burnett and David R. Large, U. of Nottingham, Augmented Mirrors: Depth Judgments When Augmenting Video Displays to Replace Automotive Mirrors 2. Lindsay O. Long, Exponent Failure Analysis Associates Inc.; Christopher C. Pagano, Ravikiran B. Singapogu, and Timothy C. Burg, Clemson U., Surgeon’s Perception of Soft Tissue Constraints and Distance-to-Break in a Simulated Minimally Invasive Surgery Task 3. Taylor B. Murphy and Alexander Morison, Ohio State U., Affordances as a Means to Assess Human-Sensor-Robot Performance 4. Nathan Herdener, Christopher D. Wickens, Benjamin A. Clegg, and C. A. P. Smith, Colorado State U., Anchoring and Adjustment With Spatial Uncertainty in Trajectory Prediction 5. Kylie Gomes and Sara Lu Riggs, Clemson U., Crossmodal Matching: A Comparison of Two Methods ST6 – The Evolving Role of Automation in Transportation: Human Factors Lessons Learned From the Different Modes SURFACE TRANSPORTATION Friday, September 23, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Maura Lohrenz, Volpe National Transportation Systems Center Panelists: Maryam Allahyar, U.S. Federal Railroad Admin.; Ensar Becic, National Transportation Safety Board; Sheryl Chappell, U.S. Federal Aviation Admin.; Donald L. Fisher, U. of Massachusetts-Amherst; Chris Monk, National Highway Traffic Safety Admin.; Brian H. Philips, U.S. Federal Highway Admin. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 F RIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 3 ST7 – Multitasking and Safety SURFACE TRANSPORTATION Friday, September 23, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Monroe (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: John Sullivan, U. of Michigan Transportation Research Inst.; Cochair: Cheryl Bolstad, Touchstone Evaluations 1. Joel M. Cooper, Spencer C. Castro, and David L. Strayer, U. of Utah, Extending the Detection Response Task to Simultaneously Measure Cognitive and Visual Task Demands 2. Daniela Barragán, Daniel M. Roberts, Steven D. Chong, and Carryl L. Baldwin, George Mason U., Exploring Mind Wandering While Driving 3. Yuexin Xiong and Guozhen Zhao, Chinese Academy of Science, Taxi-Hailing Apps: Negative Impacts on Taxi Driver Performance 4. Jonna Turrill, James R. Coleman, Rachel J. Hopman, Joel M. Cooper, and David L. Strayer, U. of Utah, The Residual Costs of Multitasking: Causing Trouble Down the Road Friday, September 23 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon AC2 – Gathering Meaningful Data From Novices and/or in Simplified Operating Environments to Inform Us About Highly Complex Operational Environments AUGMENTED COGNITION Friday, September 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Georgetown East (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Niav Hughes, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Panelists: Amy D’Agostino, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commis sion; Jordan Multer, U.S. Dept. of Transportation; Michael Hildebrandt, Inst. for Energy Technology; Peter A. Hancock and Lauren Reinerman-Jones, U. of Central Florida; Linda Elliot, U.S. Army Research Lab AS5 – Methods and Tools for Improving Air Traffic Control AEROSPACE SYSTEMS TE5 – Assessment Tools and Techniques TEST AND EVALUATION; COSPONSORED BY SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT Friday, September 23, 8:30–10:00 a.m. Gunston (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Jeffrey Thomas, U.S. Army Research Lab 1. Michael Minge, Manfred Thüring, and Ingmar Wagner, Technische Universität Berlin, Developing and Validating an English Version of the meCUE Questionnaire for Measuring User Experience 2. Stephen Dorton, Ronald Spaulding, Patrick Burton, and Angelique Wetzel, Sonalysts, Inc., Assessing Corporate Perceptions of a Human Factors Lab Using Thematic Text Analysis 3. Anson Ho, Catherine Maritan, Jeffery Sullivan, Eric Cheng, and Shi Cao, U. of Waterloo, Measuring Glance Legibility of Wearable Heads-Up Display Interfaces Using an Adaptive Staircase Procedure: A Pilot Study With Google Glass 4. Thomas Fincannon, Applied Research Assoc.; Vicky Ahlstrom, FAA Human Factors Branch, Scale Size of the Air Traffic Workload Input Technique (ATWIT): A Review of Research Friday, September 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Monroe (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Steven Landry, Purdue U.; Cochair: Jennifer Ludvigsen, U. of Central Florida 1. Sehchang Hah, Ben Willems, Gary Mueller, Daniel R. Johnson, and Hyun Woo, U.S. Federal Aviation Admin.; John DiRico, Kevin Hallman, Kenneth Schulz, and Sonia Alvidrez, TASC, Inc.; Karl A. Meyer, MITRE Corp.; Robert Bastholm and Jonathan R. Rein, Spectrum Software Technology, Inc.; Scott Terrace, Behavioral Science Assoc., Inc., Human Factors Evaluation of Conflict Resolution Advisories for Air Traffic Control in the En-Route Domain 2. Kathleen McGarry, MITRE Corp.; Lynne Martin, San Jose State U.; Kevin Witzberger, NASA Ames Research Center, Terminal Controller Feedback on an Automated Sequencing and Spacing Tool 3. Saptarshi Mandal and Ziho Kang, U. of Oklahoma; Angel Millan, U.S. Federal Aviation Admin., Data Visualization of Complex Eye Movements Using Directed Weighted Networks: A Case Study on a Multi-Element Target-Tracking Task 4. Adriana Miramontes and Jillian Keeler, California State U., Long Beach; Roberta L. Zimmerman and Valerie J. Gawron, MITRE Corp.; Vernol Battiste, NASA Ames Research Center; Thomas Strybel and Kim-Phuong L. Vu, California State U., Long Beach, Examining the Effectiveness of a Traffic Flow Management Course for Air Traffic Control Students FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 41 F RID AY, SE PT E MB E R 2 3 CE14 – Prediction and Decision Making COGNITIVE ENGINEERING AND DECISION MAKING Friday, September 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Columbia 9 (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: Joel Suss, Wichita State U.; Cochair: Matylda Ludwiki Gerber 1. Christopher D. Wickens, Nathan Herdener, Benjamin A. Clegg, and C. A. P. Smith, Colorado State U., Purchasing Information to Reduce Uncertainty in Trajectory Prediction 2. David LaVergne and Judith Tiferes, U. at Buffalo, SUNY; Michael Jenkins, Charles River Analytics; Geoff Gross, Modus Operandi; Ann M. Bisantz, U. at Buffalo, SUNY, Linguistic Estimations of Human Attributes 3. Nicholas Hertz and Eva Wiese, George Mason U., Influ ence of Agent Type and Task Ambiguity on Conformity in Social Decision Making 4. Yeti Li and Catherine M. Burns, U. of Waterloo; Rui Hu, Microsoft Corp., Representing Stages and Levels of Automation on a Decision Ladder: The Case of Automated Financial Trading E8 – Exploring the Future of Human Factors Education: Online Learning, MOOCs, Next-Generation Standards, and the Technological Skills We Need to Impart EDUCATION Friday, September 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Cardozo (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Megan Olson, Texas Tech U. Panelists: Heather C. Lum, Penn State Erie, The Behrend College; Kelly S. Steelman, Michigan Technological U.; Christina M. Frederick and Nathan A. Sonnenfeld, EmbryRiddle Aeronautical U.; Susan Amato-Henderson, Michigan Technological U.; Thomas J. Smith, U. of Minnesota HC14 – Promoting Patient Safety With Human Factors Methods: Practical Approaches to Current Medication Management Issues HC15 – Bringing Safety II to Health Care: Barriers and Facilitators HEALTH CARE Friday, September 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Jefferson East (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Michael Rayo, Ohio State U. Panelists: David D. Woods, Ohio State U; Robert L. Wears, U. of Florida; Rollin J. (Terry) Fairbanks, MedStar Health; Gerard Castro, The Joint Commission; Shawna Perry, U. of Florida HP4 – Model-Based Assessment HUMAN PERFORMANCE MODELING Friday, September 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Fairchild (Terrace Level) Lecture Chair: David Kieras, U. of Michigan 1. Michael T. Tolston, Oak Ridge Inst. for Science and Education; Adam J. Strang, Gregory J. Funke, and Brent Miller, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Rebecca Brown and Lauren Menke, Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp., Evaluating the Relationship Between Team Performance and Joint Attention With Longitudinal Multivariate Mixed Models 2. Fred Feng, Shan Bao, James Sayer, and David LeBlanc, U. of Michigan Transportation Research Inst., Spectral Power Analysis of Drivers’ Gas Pedal Control During Steady-State Car-Following on Freeways 3. Hanshu Zhang and Joseph W. Houpt, Wright State U., Assessing Multispectral Image Fusion With Systems Factorial Technology 4. Michael E. Watson, Christina F. Rusnock, Michael E. Miller, and John M. Colombi, U.S. Air Force Inst. of Technology, Performing System Tradeoff Analyses Using Human Performance Modeling 5. Y. Harari, Ben-Gurion U. of the Negev; A. Bechar, Agriculture Research Organization; R. Riemer, Ben-Gurion U. of the Negev, An Investigation of Workplace Design and the Worker’s Anthropometrics Influence on Work Pace During Manual Material Handling Tasks HEALTH CARE Friday, September 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon International West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Carrie Reale, Vanderbilt U. Medical Center Panelists: Jason J. Saleem, U. of Louisville; Emily S. Patterson, Ohio State U.; Aaron Zachary Hettinger, Georgetown U.; Shilo Anders, Vanderbilt U. Medical Center; Anne Miller, eHealth New South Wales 42 FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 F RIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 3 I5/CS – Touch/Mouse Input OE14 – Ergonomics of Aging and Obesity INTERNET; COSPONSORED BY COMPUTER SYSTEMS OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS Friday, September 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Lincoln West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Jay Elkerton, Emerson Process Management; Cochair: Anson Ho, Microsoft 1. Boyi Hu and Xiaopeng Ning, West Virginia U., Effects of Touch Screen Interface Parameters on User Task Performance 2. Sean T. Hayes, Charleston Southern U.; Julie A. Adams, Vanderbilt U., Adaptive Control-Display Ratios for Smartphones 3. Angela Avera, U. of Houston-Clear Lake; Christy Harper, Natalia Russi-Vigoya, and Stephen Stoll, HP Inc., Effects of Touchpad Size on Pointing and Gestural Input Area and Performance 4. Tara M. Young, Jing Chen, and Zhange Shentu, New Mexico State U., Effect of Cursor Orientation on Left- and Right-Hand Mouse Control 5. Patrick Mead, David Keller, and Megan Kozub, U.S. Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren Division, Point With Your Eyes, Not With Your Hands: Using Eye-Tracking to Enhance Performance of Gross-Motor Gestural Controls Friday, September 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Jefferson West (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Carolyn Sommerich, Ohio State U.; Cochair: Monica Jones, U. of Michigan 1. Mahboobeh Ghesmaty Sangachin and Lora A. Cavuoto, U. at Buffalo, SUNY, Obesity Research in Occupational Safety and Health: A Mapping Literature Review 2. Jian Liu, Miaozong Wu, James McIntosh, and Yi-Po Chiu, Marshall U., Aging Effect on Gait Symmetry After Perturbation Training 3. Monica L. H. Jones, Sheila Ebert, Riley Horn, and Matthew P. Reed, U. of Michigan Transportation Research Inst., Development of Three-Dimensional Anthropometry Methods for Patients With High Body Mass Index 4. Sriya Ngo, Carolyn M. Sommerich, and Anthony F. Luscher, Ohio State U., Digital Human Modeling of Obese & Aging Workers in Automotive Manufacturing 5. Ranjana K. Mehta and Joohyun Rhee, Texas A&M U.; Lora A. Cavuoto, U. at Buffalo, SUNY, Muscle Oxygenation Correlates of Handgrip Fatigue With Obesity OE13 – Occupational Ergonomics ST8 – What Will Happen to the Teen Drivers of Today? A Triage of Research and Intervention Issues OCCUPATIONAL ERGONOMICS Friday, September 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Lincoln East (Concourse Level) Lecture Chair: Richard Gardner, Boeing; Cochair: Denny Yu, Purdue U. 1. Robert Granzow, Mark C. Schall, Jr., and Mathew Smidt, Auburn U., Full Shift Physical Activity Among Refores tation Hand Planters: A Feasibility Study 2. Montana Haygood and Bruce N. Walker, Georgia Tech, Temporary and Permanent Hearing Loss Among College-Aged Drumline Members 3. Steven C. Mallam, Monica Lundh, and Scott N. MacKinnon, Chalmers U. of Technology, Supporting Participatory Practices in Ship Design and Construction – Challenges and Opportunities 4. Seobin Choi and Gwanseob Shin, Ulsan National Inst. of Science and Technology, Center of Mass Location of Stick Vacuum Cleaners Affects Physical Demands During Floor Vacuuming 5. Sara Pazell and Robin Burgess-Limerick, U. of Queensland; Tim Horberry, Monash U., Case Study: Participatory Ergonomics in Road Construction and an Occupational Perspective of Health SURFACE TRANSPORTATION Friday, September 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Columbia 11 (Terrace Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Jeff Caird, U. of Calgary Panelists: Lana Trick, U. of Guelph; Charlie Klauer, Virginia Tech Transportation Inst.; Wiliam J. Horrey, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for Safety; Bruce Simons-Morton, National Insts. of Health; Donald L. Fisher, Volpe National Transportation Systems Center; Eduardo Romano, Pacific Inst. for Research and Evaluation; Paul A. Green, U. of Michigan Transportation Research Inst. TE6 – Evaluating Demands Associated with the Use of Voice-Based In-Vehicle Interfaces TEST AND EVALUATION; COSPONSORED BY SURFACE TRANSPORTATION Friday, September 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon Georgetown West (Concourse Level) Discussion Panel Chair: Bryan Reimer, Massachusetts Inst. of Technology Panelists: Linda Angell, Touchstone Evaluations; David L. Strayer, U. of Utah; Louis Tijerina, Ford Motor Co.; Bruce Mehler, Massachusetts Inst. of Technology FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 43 PAR T IC IPA NT INDE X Abbass, Hussein, A., 22 Abbate, Andrew J., 30 Abdelfattah, Sherif M., 22 Abdelrahman, Amro, 28 Abernathy, James H., 29 Abts, Natalie, 37 Abulhassan, Yousif, 22 Acemyan, Claudia Ziegler, 17, 18 Achtemeier, Jacob D., 18 Adams, Julie A., 25,34, 43 Adibuzzaman, Mohammad, 35 Agnew, Michael, 21 Agnisarman, Sruthy, 35 Aguiar, Nathan, 33 Ahghari, Mahvareh, 34 Ahlstrom, Vicky, 41 Ahmad, Basel, 13 Ahn, Sung Hee, 18, 34 Ai-Vyrn, Chin, 32 Aitken, Leanne M., 21 Alabdulkarim, Saad, 21, Albert, William, 29 Alessa, Faisa, M., 29 Alfred, Petra, 12 Allaham, M. Mowafak 29,33 Allahyar, Maryam, 40 Allread, W. Gary 32, Alvarez-Casado, Enrique, 35, Alves, Erin, 11 Alvidrez, Sonia, 41 Amato-Henderson, Susan, 42 Amburn, Charles R., 17 Amick, Jason R., 17 Amick, Ryan Z., 28, 37 Amissah, Matthew, 14 Anania, Emily C., 33, 35 Anders, Shilo, 24, 42 Andre, Anthony D., 15 Andre, Terence S., 30 Andreoni, Giuseppe, 24 Angell, Linda, 43 Anglin, Katlin M., 33 Ankem, Gayatri, 38 Anthony, Mark, 30 Ardoin, Wil-Johneen, 29 Arendt, Dustin, L., 25 Armstrong, Thomas J., 17, 21, 22 Ashdown, Amanda, 16 Ashlock, Derek “Baffle,” 11, 16 Atzori, Tiziana, 24 Augustine, Norman R., 10 Avera, Angela, 39, 43 Avnet, Mark Sean, 11 Ayaz, Hasan, 25 Bailey, Shannon K. T., 16, 18 Bain, Philip, 24 44 PART ICIPAN T I N DEX Baird, Brian, 25, Baker, Anthony L., 26, 37 Baker, Electa A., 25 Balasingam, Balakumar, 31 Baldwin, Carryl L., 21, 26, 32, 41 Baldwin, Natalee K., 35 Balk, Stacy A., 14, 35 Bao, Shan, 42 Bao, Stephen, 29 Barakat, Brandon, 34 Barbe, M., F., 37 Barbieri, Dechristian, 39 Barde, Amit, 14, 35 Barnes, Laura E., 21 Barnes, Michael J., 33 Barr-Gillespie, A. E., 37 Barragán, Daniela, 41 Barrero, Lope H., 25 Bartha, Michael, 9 Bass, Ellen J., 30 Basso, Jared E., 40 Bastholm, Robert, 17, 41 Batista, Natasha A., 30 Battiste, Vernol, 41 Baugh, Lee A., 13 Baynes, Peter, 38 Bazley, ConneMara, 23 Beaubien, Jeff, 15 Beben, Melissa, 17 Bechar, A., 42 Becic, Ensar, 40 Becker, Mark E., 37 Bedwell, Wendy L., 19 Behymer, Kyle J., 20 Bells, Asante, 20 Ben-Asher, Noam, 33 Benedict, Brianna S., 20 Benedict, Jacob D., 19 Bengler, Klaus, 12, 15 Bennett, Joseph, 31 Bennett, Winston R., 25, 36 Beringer, Dennis B., 28 Berkowsky, Ronald W., 13 Bernhardt, Kyle A., 17 Berry, Katie, 14 Best, Andrew, 10, 16 Best, Christopher, 10 Betza, Scott M., 29 Bevitt, Jacob R., 37 Bewaji, Oluwatosin A., 18, 29 Billinghurst, Mark, 14, 35 Billman, Dorrit, 20 Bisantz, Ann M., 13, 22, 39, 42 Bitan, Yuval, 23 Blakely, Megan J., 18 Blanchard, Harry E., 10 Blank, Amy, 11 Blickensderfer, Beth L., 14, 33, 37 Bliss, James P., 12, 37, 39 Boehm-Davis, Deborah A., 13, 22, 33, 34 Bok, Ilgeun, 24 Bolstad, Cheryl, 41 Bolton, Amy, 11, 14, 15, 16 Bolton, Matthew L., 13, 32 Bonner, Desmond, 12, 20 Borchardt, James G., 13, 22 Borghetti, Brett J., 22, 25 Boring, Ronald L., 12, 16, 17, 20, 23, 37 Borowsky, Avinoam, 13, 33 Borzendowski, Stephanie, 34, 36 Bos, Nathan, 25 Bossi, Linda L. M., 32, 38 Bosson, Nichole, 13 Boston-Clay, Crystal, 25 Bowden, James R., 34 Boyce, Michael W., 16 Boyd, Andrew D., 32 Boyle, Linda, 34 Bracken, Bethany, 40 Braden, Jeffery P., 12 Bradlau, Mallorie, 37 Brady, Peter A., 29 Braithwaite, Jim, 22 Branaghan, Russell J., 24 Brawner, Keith, 19 Bray-Miners, Jordan, 14 Brecknell, Birgit, 21, 31 Brill, J. Christopher, 39 Brimstin, Jay A., 26 Briones, Elizabeth, 31 Brown, Dannielle, 21 Brown, Joanna, 31 Brown, Preston, 19 Brown, Rebecca, 19, 25, 42 Brown, Stephanie A. T., 15, 18 Brown, Teairra M., 32 Bruder Bertuluce Bertani, Luiz Felipe, 30 Brungart, Douglas S., 11, 32 Bruni, Sylvain, 31, 39 Bull, Tyler P., 17 Burg, Timothy C., 40 Burgess, Richard A., 14 Burgess-Limerick, Robin, 25, 29, 2243 Burhans, Charles G., 22 Burke, Kelly A., 10, 20 Burke, Shawn, 17 Burnett, Gary, 40 Burns, Catherine M., 42 Burtner, Russ, 25 Burton, Patrick, 41 Busche, Lisa, 19 Byrne, Cristina L., 17 PARTICIPANT INDEX Cades, David, 34, 35 Cain, Ashley A., 37 Caine, Kelly, 26, 39 Caird, Jeff, 43 Caldwell, Barrett S., 23 Calhoun, Gloria L., 20, 22, 28, 32 Calkins, Lynn, 34 Callender, Aimee, 22 Calvert, K. L., 16 Campbell, Alan O., 36 Cao, Shi, 41 Caplan, Stanley H., 14, 22 Carayon, Pascale, 13, 23, 24 Carrasquillo, Vernnaliz, 21 Carswell, C. Melody, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 Carter, Lemuria, 22 Carter, Martha, 19 Case, Andrea, 37 Castro, Gerard, 42 Castro, Spencer C., 35, 41 Catacora, Danny, 20 Catrambone, Richard, 17 Cavuoto, Lora A., 29, 43 Chalil Madathil, Kapil, 35 Chamberland, Cindy, 39 Champney, Roberto, 26 Chan, Foon-Yee, 18 Chancey, Eric T., 21 Chaparro, Barbara, 18 Chappell, Sheryl, 40 Chastain, Janet Wu, 19 Chaudhari, Ajit M. W., 37 Chavez, Lisa, 12 Chen, Huei-Yen Winnie, 26 Chen, Jessie Y. C., 12, 16, 33 Chen, Jing, 14, 28, 34, 43 Cheng, Eric, 41 Cheng, Lara, 23, 29 Chien, Shih-Yi, 32 Chignell, Mark, 12, 29 Chiu, C.-Y. Peter, 28, 32 Chiu, Yi-Po, 43 Cho, Jay, 24 Choi, Byeonghwa, 37 Choi, Donghee, 37 Choi, Hyeg Joo, 15, 18 Choi, Sang D., 13 Choi, Seobin, 43 Choi, Teukgyu, 24 Chollette, Veronica, 36 Chong, Steven D., 41 Choong, Yee-Yin, 29 Christensen, Kallan, 19 Chu Kiong, Loo, 32 Clacy, A., 36 Claypoole, Victoria L., 17, 18, 19 Clegg, Benjamin A., 39, 40, 42 PAR T IC IPA NT INDE X Cohen, H. Harvey 30 Cohen, Joseph 36 Cohen, Tara, 28 Coleman, James R., 35, 41 Colombi, John M., 42 Colombini, Daniela, 35 Colombo, Daniel J., 12 Connell, Linda, 30 Cook, Fay Lomax, 13 Cooke, Nancy J., 10, 16, 17, 22 Cooper, Joel M., 35, 41 Coppola, Jennifer, 38 Corbridge, Colin, 30 Corso, Gregory M., 28 Costedoat, Gregory M., 18 Coughlin, Joseph F., 13, 26 Coyne, Joseph, 17, 20, 22, 31 Craig, Curtis, 16, 31 Craig, Scotty D., 24 Creager, James H., 25 Crockett, RaeEllen J., 17 Cruit, Jessica, 14 Crumely-Branyon, Jessica J., 35 Crump, Caroline, 34 Cuevas, Haydee, 9 Cummings, Mary L., 13 Cunningham, Rachel Marie 39 Cymek, D. H., 23 Czaja, Sara J., 13 D’Agostino, Amy, 30, 41 D’Onofrio, Sara, 24 D’Souza, Clive, R., 21, 26, 37 Dao, Arik-Quang, V., 28 Davies, Hugh, 25 Davies, Simon R. H., 22 Davis, Jerry, 22, 34 Davis, Kermit G., 22, 23, 25 Davis, Lauren, 15 Davis, Matthew C., 21 Day, Joshua, 30 de Joux, Neil R., 18 de Visser, Ewart J., 13, 20, 26 Deaven, Keith, 10 DeCostanza, Arwen H., 26 Degani, Asaf, 14 del Rio, Richard A., 24 DeLeon, Ruben, 39 DeLucia, Patricia R., 20 Demir, Mustafa, 10 Dempsey, Patrick G., 11, 25 Dennerlein, Jack T., 25 Denues, Kody, L., 17 DePass, Beth, 20 Desai, Yogeeta, 15 Deutsch, Omer, 14 Dewar, Alexis R., 17, 18, 19 PART ICIPAN T I N DEX Dewey, Jared S., 20 Di Nocera, Francesco, 26 DiazGranados, Deborah, 36 Dickerson, Jennifer, 18 Diederiks, Yasmin, 19 Diiulio, Julie, 17 Dinakar, Swaroop, 26, 36 Dinh, Julie, 16 DiRico, John, 41 Dobres, Jonathan, 13 Dodge, D., 26 Dodshon, Philippa, 30 Doggett, Alexandra, 28 Domeyer, Josh E., 38 Donaldson, Ross, 13 Donmez, Birsen, 26, 33, 34 Dorneich, Michael C., 12, 17, 28, 29, 31, 36 Dorris, Audrey E., 31 Dorton, Stephen, 41 Douglas, Ethan C., 29 Drews, Frank A., 14, 26, 34 Dropps, Maria, 28, Drury, Jill L., 25, Du, Bronson, 25 Du, Yu, 17 Dudley, Rachel, 28 Dufour, Jonathan S., 17 Dukes, Allen, 19 Dulchinos, Victoria L., 28 Dulude, Catherine, 34 Duraj, Victor, 13 Durrani, Sami, 23 Dutt, Mohini, 37 Dwivedy, Pritty, 22 Dye, Gregory, 25 Dykstra, Jessica G., 31 Ebert, Sheila, 43 Edery, Julien, 26 Edewaard, Darlene E., 36 Edwards, Tamsyn, 37 Edworthy, Jonathan, 32 Edworthy, Judy, 32 Eisert, Jesse Lee 26 Elias, Eileen, 20 Elkerton, Jay, 10, 23, 25, 43 Elkin-Frankston, Seth, 40 Elliot, Linda, 26, 41 Elliott, M. E., 37 Emery, Cathy D., 16 Émond, Marcel, 29 Endsley, Mica R., 15, 36 Ericson, Justin M., 35 Escobar, Claudia, 34 Estes, Steven, 8, 10 Evans, Kevin D., 28 Fadden, Steve, 39 Fagerlund, Agnes, 13, 23 Fahey, Christopher S., 20 Fairbanks, Rollin J. (Terry), 39, 42 Fan, Chengcheng, 20, Farmer, Jessica, 34 Farrell, Philip S. E., 14 Farrell, Simon, 33 Farry, Mike, 40 Fathallah, Fadi, 13 Feeley, Cheryl, 34 Fekety, Drea K., 36 Feldhütter, Anna, 12 Feng, Fred, 35, 42 Feng, Jing, 18 Feng, XIn 37 Fercho, Kelene A., 13 Fernandes, Alexandra, 19 Fernandes, Alicia, 10 Fernandez, Jeffrey E., 32 Fernando, Rohan, 30 Ferraro, F. Richard, 17 Ferris, Thomas K., 11, 13, 26, 29, 35, 38 Figueroa, Ivonne, 19 Figueroa, Rosemarie, 17 Fincannon, Thomas, 41 Finomore, Victor S., 18, 21, 30, 36 Fiore, Stephen M., 16, 23 Fisher, Donald L., 12, 22, 33, 38, 40, 43 Fisher, Jennifer, 22 Fitzpatrick, Sean, 21 Flanagan, Mindy, 17 Fletcher, J. D. , 19 Fletcher, Keaton A., 19, 26 Fong, Allan, 28, 35 Foroughi, Cyrus K., 33, 38 Forzoni, Leonardo, 24 Fournelle, Connie, 31 Fournier, Pamela, 39 Fox, Robert R., 32, 35 Frantz, J. Paul 22 Fraulini, Nicholas W., 17, 18, 19 Frederick, Christina M., 12, 42 Freeman, Guo, 38 Freivalds, Andris, 24 Frost, Robert, 28 Fu, Bo, 19 Funk, Kenneth H., 16 Funke, Gregory J., 10, 18, 19, 21, 25, 28, 32, 42 Funke, Matthew E., 21 Funkhouser, Kelly, 14, 26 Gabbard, Joseph L., 24, 26, 32, 40 Gallagher, Kaitlin M., 29 PARTICIPANT INDEX Gallagher, Sean, 22, 34, 35, 37 Galloway, Trysha, 12 Gani, Sayf, 36 Gannon, Erin, 18 Gao, Xuefei, 18 Garafalo, Jenna, 17 Garcia-Alcaraz, Jorge Luis, 11 Gardner, Richard, 11 Garofalo, Evan, 32 Gartland, Emily, 10 Gaspar, John, 35 Gausche-Hill, Marianne, 13 Gawron, Valerie J., 22, 41 Ge, Huangyi, 34 Geiskkovitch, Denise, 35 Genaro Motti, Vivian, 26 Gerber, Matylda Ludwiki, 25, 42 Gersh, John R., 25 Ghesmaty Sangachin, Mahboobeh, 43 Giametta, Joseph J., 22 Giang, Wayne C. W., 34, Gibson, Sheree L., 11 Gilbert, Juan, 20 Gilbert, Stephen, 12, 15, 37 Gillan, Douglas J., 12, 20, 22, 25, 26 Gipson, Christina, 10 Gleed, Jeremy, 34 Goddard, Donald, 13 Gold, Christian, 12 Goldberg, Benjamin, 16, 19, 24 Goldman, Claudia V., 14 Goldstein, Judah, 29 Gomes, Kylie, 40 Gonçalves, Rafael, 30 Gonzalez, Cleotilde, 33 Gonzalez, Danielle, 28 Goodwin, Gregory, 26 Gopher, Daniel, 22 Goring, Breanna Janae, 15 Gosbee, John, 37 Gowda, Nikhil, 14 Gramopadhye, Anand K., 35 Granite, Guinevere, 32 Granzow, Robert, 43 Gray, Rob, 24 Gray, Wayne D., 22, 23 Greatbatch, Richard L., 19 Greenberg, Ariel, 25 Greene, Kristen K., 29 Greenfield, Geva, 23 Greenlee, Eric T., 19, 21, 25 Greenstein, Joel S., 22 Greenstreet, Alexis, 30 Greenwald, Cassie, 17 Greenwood, Pamela, 22 Grego-Nagel, Anne C., 13 45 PAR T IC IPA NT INDE X Grimm, Chase, 15 Grishin, John, 14, 26 Gross, Geoff, 42 Grundgeiger, Tobias, 21 Gugerty, Leo, 17 Gunning, Jessica, 17 Guo, Xiang, 35 Gurses, Ayse P., 11 Guru, Khurshid A., 13 Gutzwiller, Robert, 32 Hadrévi, J., 37 Hagegeorge, George, 32 Hah, Sehchang, 41 Hajiseyedjavadi, Foroogh, 38 Hale, Kelly S., 17, 32 Hall, Stephanie, 32 Hallbeck, M. Susan 22, 28, 29, 37 Hallman, Kevin, 41 Han, David, 29, Hancock, Peter A., 9, 15, 21, 22, 26, 33, 36, 37, 39, 41 Handley, Holly A. H., 14 Haney, Justin M., 21 Hanley, Taylor Ann, 21 Hanna, Christopher, 31 Hannigan, Frank, 23, Hannon, Daniel, 34 Happel, Oliver, 21 Harari, Y., 42 Harper, Christy, 9, 28, 43 Harper, William, 38 Harris Adamson, Carisa, 11 Harter, Jonathon, 20, Hasanain, Bassam, 32 Hashish, Rami, 35, Hassall, Maureen, 35 Hasselgren, Jacob A., 12 Hauck, Christopher, 29 Haun, Nicholas, 23 Hauser, Herbert, 16 Hayashi, Miwa, 28 Hayes, Sean T., 34, 43 Haygood, Montana, 43 Haynes, Mark, 10 He, Jibo, 18 Hedge, Alan, 34, 39 Helander, Martin, G., 11, 32 Helleberg, John, 10 Helton, William S., 14, 18, 23, 26, 35 Hendricks, Deborah J., 20, Hennessy, Edward R., 15 Herberger, Sarah M., 17 Herdener, Nathan, 40, 42 Hernandez-Arellano, Juan Luis, 11 Herout, Jennifer, 28, 46 PART ICIPAN T I N DEX Hertz, Nicholas, 42 Hesse, Brad, 36 Hester, Michelle, 17 Hettinger, Aaron Zachary 39, 42 Hickling, Anna, 31 Higginbotham, D. Jeffery, 13 Higgins, J., Stephen 26 Hildebrandt, Michael, 19, 41 Hill, Stephen, 11 Hilliard, Antony, 21 Hines, Terence, 16 Hinsvark, Arthur, 20 Ho, Anson, 41, 43 Ho, Baotran, 26 Hobbs, Alan, 30 Hodgetts, Helen M., 39 Hoekstra-Atwood, Liberty, 26 Hoffman, Robert, 22, 28 Holden, Richard J., 8, 39 Holmblad, Julieanne, 22 Holt, Jerred C., 19 Hölttä-Otto, Katja, 28 Holub, Joseph, 12 Hoonakker, Peter, 13, 24 Hoover, Adam, 18 Hopman, Rachel J., 41 Horberry, Tim, 29, 33, 43 Horn, Riley, 43 Horrey, Wiliam J., 16, 35, 43 Horst, Dick L., 21, 37 Houpt, Joseph W., 13, 42 Hoyle, W., Sloane 29, Hu, Boyi, 43 Hu, Peter F., 32 Hu, Rui, 42 Hu, S. Jack 21 Hu, Tengwen, 24 Hu, Xiangen, 24 Huang, Yunzhi, 29 Huangfu, Rong, 34 Hüger, Adrian, 12 Hughes, Ashley, 22 Hughes, Niav, 30, 41 Hui, Lavinia, 34 Hullinger, David, 12, 36 Hundt, Ann Schoofs, 11, 13, 23 Hussein, Ahmed A., 13 Hwang, Jaejin, 17 Imada, Andrew S., 33 Inagaki, Toshiyuki, 35 Inibhunu, Catherine, 31 Inman, Vaughan W., 18 Isleib, Jessica D., 24 Ismirle, Jennifer, 34 Israelski, Edmond W., 22 Itoh, Makoto, 35 Iwig, Chelsea, 16 Izzetoglu, Kurtulus, 25 Jackson, James E., 34 Jackson, Kimberly F., 12 Jackson, Steven, 14, 18, 35 Jacobs, Karen, 20, 23 Jahn, S., 23 James, Joseph J., 12 James, Tamara, 37 Jantzi, Nichole , 23 Jardina, Jo Rain 30 Jarstad, Alex, 18 Jasper, Phillip, 17, 18 Jee, Soo-Chan, 17, 34 Jeffery, Forrest S., 30 Jenkins, Michael, 42 Jenness, James, 35 Jentsch, Florian, 16, 18 Jeon, Myounghoon (Philart), 14 Jeong, Heejin, 14 Jerome, Christian, 22 Jia, Bochen, 26 Jiang, Jie, 12 Jiang, Steven, 15 Jimenez, Camilo, 16 Jin, Byungki, 17 Johns, Mishel, 14 Johnson, Cheryl I., 19, 26 Johnson, Courtney, 29 Johnson, Daniel R., 41 Johnson, Jantz V., 18 Johnson, Kayenda, 36 Johnson, Peter W., 25 Joines, Sharon, 13 Jones, Eric M., 12 Jones, Monica L. H., 21, 32, 43 Josias, Liza, 14 Ju, Wendy, 14 Jung, Hayoung, 24 Jurewicz, Katherina A., 29 Kabel, Margo, 10 Kallinen, Kari, 11 Kalsher, Michael J., 14 Kalvelage, Kelly, 31 Kandemir, Cansu, 14 Kane, Valerie, 40 Kang, Ziho, 41 Kapalo, Katelynn A., 16 Kaplan, Revelee, 29 Kappellusch, Jay M., 32 Kar, Gourab, 39 Karpinsky, Nicole D., 21, 35 Kasdaglis, Nicholas, 12 Kass, Steven, J., PARTICIPANT INDEX Katare, Bhagyashree, 35 Katrahmani, Atefeh, 40 Kaya, Diba, 12 Kaye, Elliot F., 26 Keebler, Joseph R., 13, 23, 31, 33, 37 Keeler, Jillian, 41 Keester, Dana, 18 Keller, David, 43 Kelling, Nicholas J., 9, 26, 39 Kellogg, Lee, 40, Kelly, Alison, 32 Kennedy, Tabassum, 21 Kent, Travis M., 17, 18, 19 Keogh, Martin, 24 Khalid, Halimahtun M., 11, 23, 32 Khosroshahi, Ehsan B., 40 Khunlertkit, Adjhaporn, 23, 34 Kieras, David E., 32, 42 Kim, Byeol, 20 Kim, Chulwoo, 24 Kim, Hyungil, 24, 26 Kim, Jeong Ho, 25 Kim, Jung, 39 Kim, Jung Hyup, 13 Kim, Minjee, 34 Kim, Na Young, 31, Kim, Robyn, Sun 35 Kim, So Young, 20 Kim, Sunwook, 21, Kim, Wonjoon, 18 Kim, Yong Min, 34 King, Jayde M., 33 Kirschenbaum, Susan, 33 Kirwan, Barry, 11 Klauer, Charlie, 43 Klauer, Sheila G., 38 Klein, Gary, 9 Klein, Gary L., 25 Klein, Martina I., 31 Kleiner, Brian M., 22 Klöffel, Christoph, 21 Knapik, Gregory G., 17 Knobloch, Ashley, 16 Knodler, Michael, 38 Knott, Benjamin A., 36 Knott, Verena C., 15 Kodagoda, Neesha, 25 Kohn, Spencer C., 13 Konstantinidis, Emmanouil, 33 Körber, Moritz, 12 Kornhauser, Alain L., 15 Kortum, Philip T., 17, 18 Kosmoski, Carin, 30 Kosnik, William, 10, 40 Kotowski, Susan E., 40 Kozachuk, James, 24, 26, 38 Kozlowski, Justen D., 13 PAR T IC IPA NT INDE X Kozub, Megan, 43 Krasnova, Oleksandra, 12 Kring, Jason P., 15, 33 Kumfer, Wesley J., 14 Kumpar, Dee, 37, Kumru, Asiye, 32 Kwon, Ochae, 24 Kyte, Kadon A.-K., 15 Kyung, Gyouhyung, 37 Labonté, Katherine, 16 Lacson, Frank C., 10, 14, 30, 31, 35 Lai, Mavis Wai-See, 18 Lakhmani, Shan G., 12, 16 Lam, Andrew, 22 Lam, Emma, 11 Lam, Hilary, 36 Landry, Steven J., 28 Langer, Chris, 11 Langevin, Scott, 31 Large, David R., 40 Larios, Cintya N., 16 Larkin, Gabriella, 38 Lau, Nathan, 25 Lavender, Steven A., 28, 37 LaVergne, David, 42 Lawrence, Brian, 25 Lawson, Ben D., 11, 40 Lazzara, Elizabeth H., 13, 23, 36 Leape, Charlotte, 28 LeBlanc, David, 42 Lebson, Cory, 21 Lee, Baekhee, 24 Lee, Gun, 14 Lee, Ja Eun, 37 Lee, Ja Young, 26 Lee, Jacques, 29 Lee, Jieun, 35 Lee, John D., 22, 26, 34 Lee, Joonbum, 13, 26, 38 Lee, Joong Hee, 17 Lee, Key, 14 Lee, Matthew, 21 Lee, Michael, 17, 18, 19 Lee, Nahyeon, 24 Lee, SangHyun, 30 Lee, Seungbae, 37 Lee, Seunghoon, 24 Lee, Songil, 37 Lee, Wonsup, 24 Lee, Yu Shin, 17 Leidheiser, William, 26 Lenné, M. G., 36 Lenorovitz, David, 34 Leon, Graciela, 24 Leopold, Anne, 20 Leota, Tony, 28 PART ICIPAN T I N DEX Lesch, Mary F., 16, 35 Lester, Benjamin D., 34 Levulis, Samuel J., 14 Lew, Roger, 12 Lew, Victoria, 13 Lewis, Bridget A., 9, 23 Lewis, Joanna E., 16 Lewis, Michael, 32 Leyva, Kevin, 16 Li, Hongting, 32 Li, Jing, 18, 28 Li, Jinzheng, 12 Li, Kang, 30 Li, Ninghui, 25, 34 Li, Simon, Y. W., 23, 30 Li, Yaqiong, 13 Li, Yeti, 42 Li, Yueqing, 13 Liang, Yulan, 35 Lieblich, Max, 30 Lim, Raymond, 14 Lim, Sol I., 37 Lin, Jia-Hua, 29 Lin, Jinchao, 28, 32 Ling, Chen, 12 Lintern, G., 33 Liu, David, 21, 31 Liu, Jian, 43 Liu, Jyi-Shane, 32 Liu, Kaifeng, 18 Liu, Shijing, 31 Liu, Shuang, 29 Liu, Yili, 14 Loeb, Robert G., 21, 31 Loft, Shayne, 33 Logan, Maria, 24 Lohrenz, Maura, 40 Long, Lindsay O., 40 Long, Shelby K., 33, 37 Lucia, Lisa, 31 Ludvigsen, Jennifer, 10, 40 Luecke, Greg, 15 Lum, Heather C., 9, 19, 23, 42 Lund, Arnold M., 22 Lund, Rachael, 12, 36 Lundh, Monica, 43 Luscher, Anthony F., 43 Lynas, D., 25 Lynch, Elizabeth, 28 MacAllister, Anastacia, 12 MacDonald, Russell D., 34 MacKenzie, Cameron A., 17 Mackenzie, Colin F., 32 MacKinnon, Scott N., 43 Madathil, Kapil, 35, 39 Madhavan, Poornima, 13 Maikala, Rammohan V., 35 Mallam, Steven C., 43 Malone, Gwendolyn, 11 Malone, Thomas B., 22 Malvey, Donna M., 17 Mancuso, Vincent, 25, 32 Mandal, Saptarshi, 41 Mangus, Sandra, 15 Mannaru, Pujitha, 31 Manning, Carol, 36 Manzey, Dietrich H., 23, 39 Marcano, Juan Lopez, 26 Marin, Luz, S., 25 Marion, Kaye, 10 Maritan, Catherine, 41 Marraffino, Matthew D., 19 Marras, William S., 10, 13, 17, 22, 25 Marshall, Stuart, 24, 33 Martin, Jeffrey A., 36 Martin, Lynne, 41 Martin, Taylor, 14 Marts, Lonnie, 20 Masalonis, Anthony J., 17 Masingale, Marshall, 29 Matalenas, Laura A., 24 Mathiassen, Svend Erik, 39 Mathwich, Jake R., 19 Matsangas, Panagiotis, 29 Matthews, Gerald, 17, 28, 32 Mawson, Randy, 36 Mayhorn, Christopher B., 28, 29 Maynard, Wayne S., 32 Mazzola, Marco, 24 McBride, Maranda, 22 McCarley, Jason S., 14, 31 McCarty, Madeleine, 26 McClernon, Christopher K., 18, 30, 36 McConnell, Daniel S., 18, 24, 26 McCormick, Patricia, 10 McCreary, Faith A., 20 McCurdie, Tara, 21 McCurry, J. Malcolm, 33 McDougall, Siné, 32 McElligott, James, 35 McFarland, Shane M., 37 McGarry, Kathleen, 41 McGlynn, Sean A., 35 McGrath, Jonathan, 13 McIntosh, James, 43 McKendrick, Ryan, 9 McKimm, Amy, 24 McLanders, Mia, 21 McLaughlin, Anne Collins, 9, 20, 36 McLean III, Angus L. M. Thom, 11, 14, 15, 16 PARTICIPANT INDEX McMullin, Dianne L., 14 McNamara, Jay A., 15, 18, 38 McNeese, Michael D., McNeese, Nathan J., 10, 16, 17, 23 McNeish, David, 30 McNulty, Emma, 21 Mead, Patrick, 43 Mehler, Bruce, 13, 26, 43 Mehta, Ranjana K., 25, 29, 40, 43 Mei, Dan, 32 Meingast, Melissa, 39 Mendonça, David J., 23 Menke, Lauren, 19, 25, 42 Merrick, Kathryn E., 22 Merrikhpour, Maryam, 26 Mersch, Elizabeth M., 20 Merta, Michael, 39 Merz, M., 37 Meusel, Chase R., 15 Meyer, Ashley N. D., 21 Meyer, Joachim, 36, 39 Meyer, Karl A., 41 Meyers, Matthew D., 24 Michaelis, Jessica R., 18, 24, 26 Mickelson, Robin, 39 Milan, Laurene, 34 Milewski, Julia, 34 Militello, Laura, 9, 17, 25 Millan, Angel, 41 Millen, Laura, 22 Miller, Anne, 42 Miller, Brent, 25, 42 Miller, Chris, 36 Miller, David, 14 Miller, Michael E., 32, 42 Miller, Scarlett, 29 Minge, Michael, 41 Miramontes, Adriana, 41 Miran, Seyed M., 12 Mirkin, Katelin, 29 Mistry, Urmila, 22 Mitchell, K. Blake, 15, 18, 38 Mitroff, Stephen R., 35 Mitzner, Tracy L., 35 Mize, Alexander C., 39 Modi, Lucia, 24 Mohamed, Ismail, 21 Mohme, Sophia, 21 Mok, Brian, 14 Molesworth, Brett, 12 Momen, Ali, 33 Monk, Chris, 22, 40 Monk, Kevin, 28 Mooney, John “Bam Bam,” 11, 15, 16 Moore, Jason, 29 Moorman, Helene, 35 Morey, Stephanie A., 31 47 PAR T IC IPA NT INDE X Morimoto, Yohei, 14 Morison, Alexander, 40 Morowsky, Katarina, 16 Morris, Drew M., 33 Morris, Nichole L., 18 Morrison, Jeffery, 23 Mosier, Kathleen L., 22 Moss, Jason D., 16 Mote, Jr., C. D., 33 Mou, Royce M., 25 Mowrey, Spencer, 20 Muddimer, Andrew, 9, 28 Mudrick, Nicholas, 31 Mueller, Gary, 41 Multer, Jordan, 41 Mulvihill, C. M., 36 Murphy, Taylor B., 40 Murphy-Hill, Emerson, 29 Musa, Albert, 24 Musselman, Kenneth J., 35 Muth, Eric, 18 Muth, John, 24 Muttart, Jeffrey W., 30, 36 Myers, Christopher, 10 Myers, Oliver N., 30 Nagavarupu, Shasank, 18 Najm, Wassim, 22 Nakaza, Edward T., 14 Nam, Chang S., 33 Narasimha, Shraddhaa, 37 Nardone, Amanda, 20 Nasarwanji, Mahiyar F., 11, 32 Nateghi, Roshanak, 37 Nathan-Roberts, Dan, 17, 18, 19, 26 Nees, Michael A., 18 Neilson, Brittany, 16, 33, 35 Nembhard, David A., 19 Nemire, Kenneth, 38 Nesthus, Thomas E., 42 Neville, Kelly J., 11, 14, 15, 16 Neville, Timothy J., 23 Newton, Olivia, 12 Neyens, David M., 29 Ng, Man-Wa, 32 Ngam, Caitlyn, 23 Ngo, Sriya, 18 Nguyen, Dan, 39 Nguyen, Hien, 32 Niehaus, Joseph, 42 Nikolaeva, Shantimora Gala, 17 Ning, Xiaopeng, 29, 45 Nodine, Emily, 22 Nooraddini, Ismail, 14 Nooralishani, Parham, 34 Norman, Donald A., 15 48 North, Hannah, 37 Novak, Laurie Lovett, 41 Noy, Y. Ian, 22 Nunnally, Mark, 23 Nussbaum, Maury A., 11, 21, 29, 42 Nystrom, Daniel T., 21 O’Bara, Ian C., 36 O’Hara, Ryan P., 13 O’Neill, Erin G., 40 Obenauer, William G., 14 Occhipinti, Enrico, 37 Odette, Katy L., 24 Ofat, Alyssa, 42 Ohnemus, Ken, 36 Oliveira, Ana Beatriz, 41 Olson, Megan D., 14, 23, 44 Or, Calvin Ka-Lun, 18 Oron-Gilad, Tal, 13 Ortiz, Yolanda, 35 Ososky, Scott, 19 Ostovari, Mina, 37 Overbeek, Randy W., 16 Oviatt, Tyler, 18 Owczarczak, Mary, 21 Pääsuke, Mati, 33 Pagano, Christopher C., 42 Pajoutan, Mojdeh, 29 Pak, Richard, 37, 38 Palmer, Christopher, 40 Palmer, Douglas, 18 Palmon, Noa, 42 Panzer, Rich, 21 Parchment, Avonie, 22 Park, Byoung-Keon Daniel, 32 Park, Donggun, 18 Park, Sunghwan, 17 Park, Sungryul, 39 Parker, Jessica, 10 Parkinson, James R., 28 Parmet, Yisrael, 13, 23 Pascale, Michael, 21 Pass, Jeff, 10, 21 Pastel, Robert, 25, 36 Patel, Himalaya, 17 Patel, Rajan, 34 Paterson, Estrella, 33 Paterson, Neil, 33 Patrick, Rafael N., 15 Patterson, Emily S., 28, 41, 44 Patterson, Robert E., 21 Pattipati, Krishna, 33 Paul, Celeste Lyn, 25 Paull, Douglas E., 21 Pazell, Sara, 29, 45 Pearson, Carl J., 28 Peck, Brian, 39 Pee, Derrick, 18 Pegelow, Scott, 32 Pepley, David, 29 Peres, S. Camille, 9, 18, 28, 29, 42 Perez, William, 22 Perry, Shawna, 44 Peterson, Doug, 13 Peterson, Michelle, 41 Petros, Thomas, 17 Pfaff, Mark S., 25 Pfleiderer, Elaine, 17 Philips, Brian H., 14, 18, 42 Phillips, Elizabeth, 16, 33 Phillips, Rachel, 34 Piatko, Christine, 25 Pierce, Linda G., 12, 17, 28, 38 Pilcher, June J., 35 Pires, Ale, S., 28 Pitts, Brandon, 14 Plaga, John, 10 Platte, Devin, 20 Pooler, Bryan D., 21 Popham, Jamey, 17 Porter, William Lansing, 32 Porto, Ryan, 11 Potma, Erin, 38 Potvin, Jim R., 34, 42 Powell, Robert B., 35 Pradhan, Anuj, 14 Prasov, Zahar, 12 Presnell, Michael, 42 Preusse, Kimberly C., 10, 39 Priest, Heather, 15 Prinet, Julie C., 41 Pritchett, Amy R., Proctor, Robert W., 22, 25, 36 Puche, Adam, 34 Pugh, Kristy, 34 Putri, Monika, 13 Pybus, Lawton, 20, 33 Qu, Xingda, 29 Quaresma, Manuela, 32 Quesada, Peter M., 33 Radin Umar, Radin Zaid, 18 Radlmayr, Jonas, 12 Radwin, Robert G., 32 Raeis Hosseiny, Seyed Armin, 37 Rahman, Md Mahmudur, 16 Rajivan, Prashanth, 35 Rajulu, Sudhakar, 39 Rane, Prerana, 26 PARTICIPANT INDEX Ranellone, Adam, 16 Ranes, Bethany M., 11 Rantanen, Esa M., 20, 23, 36 Rashedi, Ehsan, 21, 42 Rasool, Zeeshan, 34 Ratwani, Raj M., 28, 37, 41 Ray, Robert C., 39 Rayo, Michael F., 34, 36, 44 Read, Gemma J. M., 23, 38 Reader, Tom W., 11 Reale, Carrie, 21, 44 Reardon, Ashley, 26 Rebollo, Juan, 10 Reed, Matthew P., 21, 45 Reeves, Scott T., 29, 36 Regelski, Alena, 42 Regli, Susan Harkness, 36 Reid, Christopher R., 11, 13, 21, 39 Reid, Scott, 34 Reimer, Bryan, 13, 26, 45 Rein, Jonathan R., 43 Reinerman-Jones, Lauren, 17, 22, 32, 43 Reinvee, Märt, 33 Rempel, David, 11, 13 Renshaw, Tyler J., 24 Rey, Estefany, 25 Reyes, Natalie P., 17 Rhee, Joohyun, 45 Rhie, Ye Lim, 36 Rhiu, Ilsun, 18 Rhoades, Timothy P., 22 Rice, Stephen, 18, 19 Rice, Valerie, 23, 36 Riemer, R., 44 Riggs, Sara Lu, 29, 42 Riley, Jennifer M., 17 Ritchey, Paul, 18 Rivera, A. Joy, 29, 36 Rivera, Javier, 16 Rizzo, Trevor, 20 Roady, Trey, 26 Roberts, Daniel M., 43 Roberts, Zachary, 28 Robertson, Michelle M., 13, 23 Robinson, Stephen, 21 Rockwell, Bradley, 42 Rockwood, Kenneth, 29 Rodrigues, Marcela, 32 Rodriguez, Andrés, 25 Rodriguez, Ania, 20, 41 Rodriguez, Eva, 35 Rodriguez-Paras, Carolina, 13 Rogers, Wendy A., 37, 39 Romano, Eduardo, 45 Romigh, Griffin D., 14 Romoser, Matthew R. E., 40, 42 Roodenburg, Owen, 24 PART ICIPAN T I N DEX Ross, Garrin, 16 Roth, Emilie, 20, 41 Rothfusz, Lans, 12 Rothwell, Clayton D., 14 Rovira, Ericka, 38 Rowe, Anna, 41 Ruff, Heath A., 20, 28, 34 Rumrill, Phillip, 20 Rupert, Angus H., 42 Rupp, Michael A., 18, 24, 26 Rusnock, Christina F., 22, 36, 44 Russ, Alissa, 17 Russell, Jacob, 32 Russell, Paul N., 18 Russi-Vigoya, Natalia, 24, 45 Ryan, Jason C., 13 Rys, Malgorzata J., 13 Sabic, Edin, 14 Safdar, Nasia, 23 Salar, Menekse, 29 Salas, Eduardo, 16 Saleem, Jason J., 28, 33, 40, 44 Sall, Robert J., 18 Salmon, Paul M., 23, 38 Salomon, Kathryn A., 17 Salvucci, Dario D., 42 Samaras, Elizabeth Averill, 8 Samaras, George, 8 Sampson, Elaine, 20 Samuel, Siby, 12, 35, 40, 42 Sanders, Elizabeth B.-N., 28 Sanders, Martha J., 19, 33, 41 Sanders, Tracy L., 26 Sanderson, Penelope, 33, 35 Sangster, Matthew-Donald D., 23 Santomauro, Chiara, 21, 35 Santos, Jr., Eugene, 32 Saqqar, Nizar, 39 Sarter, Nadine, 14, 41 Sasangohar, Farzan, 9, 23 Sauls, Madison, 26 Savage-Knepshield, Pamela, 12, 38 Savoy, April, 17 Sawyer, Ben D., 13, 15, 34 Sayer, James, 44 Sayer, Tina B., 40 Scerbo, Mark W., 16 Scimemi, Sam, 15 Schafer, Kathryn E., 26 Schall, Jr., Mark C., 22, 29, 36, 39, 45 Scheff, Scott, 32 Scheldrup, Melissa R., 22 Schemmel, Andrew, 21 Scherer, Marcia, 20 Schiffman, Jeffrey, 29 Schlesinger, Joseph, 34 Schlosser, Paul, 21 Schmidt-Daly, Tarah N., 17 Schneider, Craig, 40 Schnieders, Thomas M., 18 Schnittker, R., 35 Schroeder, Bradford L., 16, 18 Schubert, Christiane, 29 Schulz, Kenneth, 43 Schuster, David, 15, 19, 39 Schwark, Gayle, 18 Schwark, Jeremy, 37 Schwartz, Warren, 20 Sciarini, Lee, 10 Scott, Ronald, 20 Scribner, David, 17 Sebastin, Sandeep, 17 Sebok, Angelia, 10, 32 Sebrechts, Marc M., 35 Seely, Owen, 38 Seidelman, Will, 19 Selkowitz, Anthony R., 16 Sendelbach, Danielle, 33 Sesek, Richard F., 22, 29, 36 Shackelford, Stacy, 34 Shah, Raina J., 22 Shah, Smruti, 12 Shalin, Valerie, 34 Shao, Fenglian, 29 Shapiro, Ronald G., 22 Sharit, Joseph, 13 Sharpe, Ben, 37 Shattuck, Lawrence G., 9, 29 Shattuck, Nita, Lewis, 9, 29 Shaw, Gareth, 32 Shaw, Tyler H., 20 Sheffield, Benjamin, 11 Shentu, Zhange, 45 Sherehiy, Bohdana, 14 Sherwood, Sarah, 11, 14, 16 Shields, Cleveland G., 37 Shin, Gwanseob, 45 Shiung, Liew Wei, 34 Shope, Steven M., 16, 17 Shorrock, Steven, 11 Shubeck, Keith T., 24 Shurbutt, Jim, 37 Sibley, Ciara, 17, 20, 22, 33 Silva, Hector, 13 Simons-Morton, Bruce, 45 Simpson, Brian D., 14, 34 Sims, Valerie K., 16, 18, 33 Sinatra, Anne M., 12, 33, 36 Singapogu, Ravikiran B., 42 Singer, Josh, 33, 39 Singh, Hardeep, 21 Sirkin, David, 14 Sirois, Marie-Josée, 29 Sirotin, Yevgeniy B., 12 Sivagnanasundaram, Navaneethan, 28 Skrypchuk, Lee, 22 Slavina, Anna, 12 Smidt, Mathew, 45 Smith, Andrew, 11 Smith, C. A. P., 42, 44 Smith, Danielle, 41 Smith, Mary Lou, 38 Smith, Melissa A., 28 Smith, Missie, 42 Smith, Thomas J., 33, 44 Smith, William, 20 Smith-Jackson, Tonya L., 11, 20, 26, 38 Smither, Janan A., 18, 24, 26 Smolenaers, Frank, 24 Snow, Jacob K., 18 So, Hing-Yu, 18 So, Joey C. Y., 20 Sommerich, Carolyn M., 18, 28, 39, 45 Sonaike, Ibukun A., 18 Sonnenfeld, Nathan A., 20, 24, 33, 44 Sottilare, Robert A., 19, 24, 33 Spaulding, Ronald, 43 Sperling, Scott, 25 Spitaletta, Jason, 25 Sproat, Jessica M., 17 Srinivasan, Divya, 41 Stacy, Webb, 15 Stanley, Laura M., 42 Stansbury, Lynn G., 34 Stanton, N. A., 38 Stark, Julie, 21 Stauffer, Callista, 20 Steege, Linsey M., 11, 33, 42 Steelman, Kelly S., 37, 44 Steuber, Jessica M., 18 Stevens, N., 38 Stevens, Ronald, 12 Steward, Brian, 17 Stimpson, Alexander J., 13 Stokes, Thomas A., 12 Stoll, Stephen, 45 Stone, Nancy J., 23 Stone, Richard T., 18, 33 Stoner, Jason, 10 Stonewall, Jacklin, 29 Stowers, Kimberly, 12, 16, 39 Strang, Adam J., 10, 21, 44 Strater, Laura, 12 Strauch, Barry, 11 Strayer, David L., 37, 43, 45 Stripp, Andrew, 24 Strybel, Thomas, 43 PARTICIPANT INDEX Stuart, Josh, 24 Sublette, Michelle A., 16, 17, 18, 19 Sugovic, Mila, 14 Suh, Youngbo, 11 Sullivan, Jeffery, 43 Sullivan, John, 43 Sum, Kelli, 26 Summers, Baron C., 16 Sumner, Anna, 17 Sun, David Tin-Fung, 18 Sun, Luqin, 17 Sun, Norm, 10 Sung, Kiseok, 24 Susindar, Sahinya, 37 Suss, Joel, 35, 44 Sutherland, Steven C., 41 Sweet, Robert, 39 Swierenga, Sarah J., 36 Sycara, Katia, 34 Szalma, James L., 17, 18, 19 Tack, David W., 14, 34 Taha, Jessica, 13 Tao, Da, 29 Tapiro, Hagai, 13 Taplin, Stephen, 38 Taub, Michelle, 33 Taylor, Melissa, 13 Tear, Morgan J., 11 Teng, Shelly, 23 Terrace, Scott, 43 Terrell, Heather K., 17 Thai, Hugh, 12 Thatcher, Andrew, 21 Thériault, Jean-Denis, 35 Thomas, Jeffrey A., 32 Thomas, Jim, 20 Thomas, M., 38 Thomas, Nicole A., 33 Thompson, Eric R., 14 Thompson, Linda-Brooke I., 11 Thüring, Manfred, 43 Tierney, Mary C., 29 Tiferes, Judith, 13, 44 Tijerina, Louis, 45 Tippey, Kathryn G., 26 Tisherman, Samuel, 34 Tolston, Michael T., 44 Tomko, Linda, 16 Tong, Tiffany, 29 Tossell, Chad C., 38 Toyoda, Heishiro, 40 Trafimow, David, 18 Trafton, J. Gregory, 35 Tran, Jimmy, 21 Tremblay, Sébastien, 16, 35, 41 Trent, Stoney, 20 49 GENTEIC PAR R AIPA L INF NT OR INDE M ATI X ON Trick, Lana, 45 Trowbridge, Francis A., 33 Tsimhoni, Omer, 14 Tu, Shin-Ping, 38 Tucker, Katherine P., 15 Turrill, Jonna, 37, 43 Tyrrell, Richard A., 38 Ueda, Mayuko, 14 Ulrich, Thomas A., 12, 16, 39 Umansky, Jonathan, 23 Usui, Shinnosuke, 14 Vacek, Joseph J., 17 Vachon, François, 16, 35, 41 Valdez, Rupa S., 8, 11, 41 Vallières, Benoît R., 35, 41 Van Mulken, M. R. H., 38 Vandenberg, Gregory, 38 Vannetti, Federica, 24 VanWormer, Lisa, 18 Vaughn-Cooke, Monifa, 12, 20 Veeramachaneni, Vishnu, 24 Velez, Jonathan E., 18 Vemury, Arun, 12 Via, Christopher, 20, 24 Vieane, Alex, 25, 34 Vincent, Emily, 12 Vinopal, Timothy, 25 Visser, Troy A. W., 35 Volante, William G., 26, 39 Volz, Katherine, 28 Vorm, Eric, 32 Vredenburgh, Alison, 36, 41 Vu, Kim-Phuong L., 43 Vu, Linh Q., 39 Wada, Kazushige, 14 Wadeson, Amy, 33 Wagner, Ingmar, 43 Wahl, Mike, 42 Wakefield, Gregory H., 34 Waldfogle, Grace E., 19 Wales, Josey, 23 Walker, Bruce N., 45 Walker, G. H., 38 Walker, Katherine E., 36 50 Walkington, Will, 14 Walliser, James C., 20 Walls, Brittany D., 19 Walters, Brett, 10, 32 Walwanis, Melissa, 11, 14, 16 Wampler, Jeffrey, 20 Wan, Yuzhi, 41 Wang, Fangfang, 25 Wang, Tieyan, 29 Wang, Wenbi, 13 Wang, Ying, 37 Wang, Zhouglun, 33 Ward, Danielle, 33 Ward, Matthew, 14, 37 Warm, Joel S., 18, 21 Warren, Benjamin, 24 Warta, Samantha F., 16 Waterson, Patrick, 21, 23 Watson, Michael E., 44 Watts, Darcy, 34 Wawrzyniak, Nicole K., 13 Waxberg McNew, Sara, 39 Wears, Robert L., 44 Weaver, Melissa, 12 Wei, Chen-Shuang, 18 Weiler, Dustin T., 28, 40 Weiner, Michael, 17 Weinger, Matthew B., 22 Weiss, Christopher F., 14 Welch, Brandon, 37 Welk, Allaire K., 20, 28, 29 Welsh, Kristen L., 13, 23, 24 Weltman, Gershon, 13 Werner, Nicole E., 11, 35, 41 Werner, Steffen, 17, 29, 39 Wetzel, Angelique, 43 Whetsel Borzendowski, Stephanie A., 38 Whitehead, Cindy, 11 Whitlock, Laura A., 26 Whitmer, Daphne E., 16, 18 Whitmore, Mihriban, 10 Wickens, Christopher D., 10, 22, 23, 28, 34, 38, 41, 42, 44 Wiczorek, Rebecca, 41 Wiegmann, Douglas A., 21 Wieland, Skylor, 20 Wiese, Eva, 28, 44 Wiest, Alexander, 15 Wiggermann, Neal, 39 Wiggins, Sterling, 15 Wilck, Nancy R., 28 Wilcox, Stephen B., 32 Willems, Ben, 25, 43 Williamson, Ann, 12 Williamson, Robert, 39 Williemsen-Dunlap, Ann, 12 Wilson, Chantale N., 19 Wilson, Kyle M., 18 Wilson, Michael David, 35 Winer, Eliot, 12, 39 Wing, David J., 10 Wise, Michael J., 22 Witzberger, Kevin, 43 Wogalter, Michael S., Wohleber, Ryan W., 12, 22, 28, 34 Wolf, Laurie, 36, 39 Wolpert, Lawrence, 39 Wong, B. L. William, 25 Woo, Hyun, 43 Woods, Amanda, 16 Woods, David D., 36, 44 Woodward, Benjamin, 33 Wooldridge, Abigail R., 24, 29 Woolley, Charles, 17 Woolley, Sandra, 28 Wray, Robert, 15 Wright, Julia L., 15, 35 Wright, Timothy J., 16, 35 Wu, Changxu, 34 Wu, Miaozong, 45 Wu, Qinge, 26 Wu, Shu-Chieh, 20 Wurmb, Thomas, 21 Xie, Anping, 11 Xie, Jeanne, 26 Xie, Shan, 37 Xin, D. L., 39 Xiong, Aiping, 25 Xiong, Yuexin, 43 Yacht, P. David, 17 Yamani, Yusuke, 21, 42 Yang, Euijung, 28, 33 Yang, Ruigang, 19 Yang, Shiming, 34 Yang, Shiyan, 13, 37, 40 GENERAL INFORMATION Yang, Weining, 25, 36 Yang, Xi Jessie, 28 Yang, Xiaonan, 13 Yang, Yushi, 29 Ye, Qing, 37 Yerdon, V. A., 26 Yi, Jihhyeon, 39 Yih, Yuehwern, 37 Yin, Shanqing, 36 Yoo, Angela, 17 Yosko, Michael, 38 You, Heecheon, 24 Young, Douglas, 36, 37 Young, Jason, 38 Young, Justin G., 32 Young, K. L., 35, 38 Young, Tara M., 45 Yovanoff, Mary, 29 Yu, Denny, 26, 28, 29, 37, 45 Yu, John-Paul J., 21 Yuditsky, Tanya, 17 Yun, Myung Hwan, 17, 18, 36 Zachary, Wayne W., 23, 32 Zackowitz, Ilene, 36 Zadra, Jonathan R., 26, 36 Zafian, Tracy M., 12, 40 Zapata-Ocampo, Daniela, 26 Zhang, Han, 24, 36 Zhang, Hanshu, 44 Zhang, Jianqiao, 37 Zhang, Jingyi, 40 Zhang, Tingru, 12 Zhang, Yiqi, 34 Zhao, Guozhen, 43 Zhong, Peihan, 33 Zhou, Jie, 29 Zhou, Wenxuan, 17 Zhu, Xinhui, 26 Zhu, Yueyan, 37 Ziegler, Matthias, 25 Zielinska, Olga A., 29 Zigman, Monica, 25 Zilberstein, Shlomo, 35 Zimmerman, Roberta L., 43 Zink, Klaus J., 21 Zish, Kevin, 35 Zucherman, Leon, 12 Zybak, Samantha, 16 ADVERT ISERS notes Postdoctoral Research Awards Senior Research Awards Research awards n U.S. federal laboratories in: Machine/Human Interface; Human Factors; Industrial Engineering; Ergonomics; and Human Performance Management Offered by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine Participating laboratories include: US Army Research Laboratory Air Force Research Laboratory US Army Natick Soldier Research, Development and Engineering Center Naval Medical Research Center/Naval Health Research Center Naval Postgraduate School Walter Reed Army Institute of Research ♦ Competitive awards for independent research ♦ Many opportunities open to international applicants as well as U.S. citizens ♦ 12-month awards renewable to 3 years ♦ Annual stipend ranging from $45,000 to $80,000 for recent Ph.D. recipients; higher for additional experience ♦ Relocation, professional travel, health insurance ♦ Application deadlines — February 1, May 1, August 1, November 1 Detailed program information, including instructions on how to apply, is available on the NRC Fellowship Programs website at: www.nationalacademies.org/rap Prospective applicants must contact Adviser(s) at the lab(s) before their application deadline to discuss research interests and funding opportunities. Applications must be submitted online directly to the NRC Fellowship Programs. CVs will not be accepted. Questions should be directed to the NRC Fellowship Programs at 202-334-2768 or [email protected] 202-334-2760 (tel) or [email protected]. ADVERTISERS 51 PERSONA L PLA NN E R notes 52 PERSONAL PLANNER HFES CAREER CENTER Online and On-Site Employment Services Exclusively for Human Factors/Ergonomics Professionals HUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIETY Career Center BENEFITS FOR EMPLOYERS BENEFITS FOR CANDIDATES If you are an employer seeking full- or part-time staff or interns with expertise in human factors/ ergonomics experience, HFES offers the leading online Career Center devoted exclusively to HF/E professionals around the world. Only HFES members can post résumés in the Career Center, ensuring that the pool of candidates has the knowledge and expertise they need to fill their positions. More than 40% of HFES members hold a doctorate, 33% hold a master’s degree, and about 15% hold a bachelor’s degree (as the highest degree held in all categories). This level of qualified candidates makes it easy for you to recruit professionals at a fraction of the cost of other major job boards. Companies registered with the Career Center have posted a similarly wide range of positions, including This service is for HFES members only! Post your résumé at www.hfes.org/Web/CareerCenter/Career.aspx and search our database of available jobs. If you see a job posting that interests you, you can e-mail your résumé directly to the employer. If you prefer to remain anonymous, the “Confidential” selection protects your identity until you choose to become known to the employer. v v v v v v v v v v v v Aerospace/Aviation Cognitive Engineering/Cognitive Modeling Analysis Consumer Product/Equipment Design Education/Research Graphical User Interface Design Human-Computer Interaction/Interfaces Industrial Design/Industrial Engineering Medical Products/Systems Safety Software Design Transportation Usability To recruit top HF/E professionals, visit our Web site at www.hfes.org/Web/CareerCenter/ Career.aspx and post a job, search the résumés, or do both. Candidates searching the database can send their résumés directly to your desktop. ON-SITE CAREER CENTER Each year, HFES hosts an On-Site Career Center at the Annual Meeting, where employers and candidates can schedule interviews, use the online Career Center, and find out about job opportunities and the pool of available job seekers. In order to reserve a booth and/or table, employers must have a current job posting or be registered to search résumés in the Online Career Center during the Annual Meeting. Just Released! Readings in Training and Simulation HFES is pleased to announce the upcoming release of Readings in Training and Simulation, Volume 2: Research Articles from 2000 to 2014, edited by Dee H. Andrews and Scotty D. Craig. The first edition, published in 2001 covering 30 years of research, is still a best-seller. This second edition has been released as an e-book for use on almost any type of device, including iPads and Kindles. Volume 2 contains 54 articles reprinted from Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society and Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making. The articles are arranged by topic with introductory comments for each section: • Training Methods • Training Devices and Simulators • Cognitive and Affective Factors Influencing Training (encompassing Affect, Emotions, and Training; Basic Cognition: Memory and Perception; Feedback; and Multimedia Learning and Cognitive Load) • Application Areas (covering Aviation/Military Training, Medical, Decision Making, Teamwork, and Aging and Training) • Transfer of Training “Assembling this work in one place showcases the contribution of the community; at the same time, the book provides students and practitioners with one-stop-shopping for the most recent science and practice in this area.” − From the Foreword by Nancy J. Cooke, Professor & Program Chair, Human-Systems Engineering, Arizona State University Order at bit.ly/ReadingsinTraining2 ebook format for iPad, Kindle, and other devices; 865 pp., $105.95 ISBN 978-0-945289-46-3 Contact HFES ([email protected]) for special student pricing and VOLUME 2: Research Articles from 2000 to 2014 Edited By Dee H. Andrews & Scotty D. Craig Published by Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Dee H. Andrews has been a training developer, researcher, and human factors psychologist since 1976. He finished his 34-year career with the Department of Defense as a Directorate Senior Scientist for Training with the 711th Human Performance Wing of the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL). Scotty D. Craig is an assistant professor in the Human Systems Engineering Program within the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering at Arizona State University (ASU). He is also the supervising faculty member for the ASU Cognitive-Based Applied Learning Technology Laboratory (www.cobaltlab.org). ordering details. Human Factors and Ergonomics Society P.O. Box 1369, Santa Monica, CA 90406-1369 USA 310/394-1811, Fax 310/394-2410, http://hfes.org ADV ERTI SERS Advanced Display Concepts Training & User Aids User Interface Prototyping ? Pacific Science & Engineering Applying scientific principles and methods to improve human performance in complex systems since 1984. Welcomes you to Washington, DC for the HFES 2016 Annual Meeting Industrial Processes Systems Engineering Testing & Evaluation Pacific Science & Engineering | 9180 Brown Deer Road, San Diego, California 92121 ADVERTISERS Usability Assessment | 858.535.1661 | www.pacific-science.com 55 ADV E R T ISE R S 56 ADVERTISERS COMING SOON! Usability Assessment: How to Measure the Usability of Products, Services, and Systems Volume 1, Users’ Guides to Human Factors and Ergonomics Methods By Philip Kortum Users’ Guides on Methods in Human Factors and Ergonomics Usability Assessment: How to Measure the Usability of Products, Services, and Systems Philip Kortum PUBLISHED BY THE HUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIETY As Kortum states in Chapter 1, “the goal of usability assessment is to find and fix usability deficiencies in the laboratory, before the products are launched, to minimize human error that results in monetary loss, customer churn, failure to achieve the desired outcome, or injury or death of the user.” Usability Assessment is a concise volume for anyone requiring knowledge and practice in assessing the usability of any type of product, tool, or system. It provides a brief history and rationale for conducting usability assessments and examples of how usability assessment methods have been applied, takes readers step by step through the process, highlights challenges and special cases, and offers real-life examples. By the end of the book, readers will have the knowledge and skills they need to conduct their own usability assessments without requiring that they read textbooks or attend workshops. This book will be valuable for undergraduate and graduate students; practitioners; usability professionals; human-computer interaction professionals; researchers in fields such as industrial design, industrial/organizational psychology, and computer science; and those working in a wide range of content domains, such as health care, transportation, product design, aerospace, and manufacturing. Developed by Series Editor Francis T. (Frank) Durso, the Users’ Guides to Human Factors and Ergonomics Methods series provide short how-to volumes that supply readers with the background, details, and worked-through examples that will enable them to initiate and follow through on the use of the method described. Each book contains enough detail to be a self-contained guide and reference work for the method. Watch for announcements of upcoming volumes. ISBN 978-0-945289-49-4 128 pp., 7” x 10” paperback PUBLISHED BY THE HUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIETY GEN E R A L INF OR M ATI O N HFES 2017 October 9–13 | JW Marriott | Austin, Texas THE place for cutting-edge presentations of human factors/ ergonomics research and applications in 23 technical areas! Scientists and practitioners from around the world will gather at the 61st Annual Meeting to deliver insights and techniques presented through ◆ Keynote and invited presentations ◆ More than 130 sessions encompassing over 500 peer-reviewed papers and posters ◆ User Experience Day ◆ Skill-building workshops The Annual Meeting offers you unique opportunities to Maximize your career potential and expand your professional network ◆ Go on Technical tours ◆ Participate in networking events for early-career professionals ◆ Take part in the Student Career Day ◆ Gain information, inspiration, and insights to move your career forward ◆ Save the Date! International Annual Meeting It is knowledge you will use to lead, grow, and bring innovation to your field. Paper submission deadline: March 6, 2017 hfes.org HUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIETY SAVE THE DATE! June 19–21, 2017 | Marriott Tampa Waterside Hotel, Tampa, Florida ErgoX delivers practical, usable, and evidence-based solutions to the challenges faced by ergonomists, risk managers, and health and safety specialists Workplace solutions for all levels of experience and work setting “I was very impressed with the inventiveness and high-quality content of ErgoX.” At ErgoX, you will: • Gain the latest insights on procedures, tools, and approaches for on-the-job safety and wellness from world-class ergonomics and safety experts • Network with presenters, practitioners, and researchers, and make new strategic connections • Find solutions to pressing issues in workplace ergonomics Y. Ian Noy, Ph.D. Liberty Mutual Research Institute for Safety “High-quality presentations – with great access to the speakers for discussions throughout the conference” Keynote Speaker: Alan Hedge, PhD, CPE, CEegHF “Prescient Ergonomics – a Strategy for Resurrection?” Cathryn Schau Pearson “ErgoX looks to the future and its exciting possibilities. It’s refreshing to see new ideas and novel approaches at an ergonomics conference” Alan Hedge is president of HumanUse Inc. He directs the Cornell Human Factors and Ergonomics Research Group (CHFERG) and is a tenured professor in the Department of Design and Environmental Analysis at Cornell. His research and teaching activities have focused on design and workplace ergonomics as these affect the health, comfort, and productivity of workers. David Alexander Auburn Engineers, Inc. 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