ABSTRACT

Human factors/ergonomics (HFE) as a discipline has grown by accretions rather than having been developed systematically and deliberately. Therefore, this book's goal creates a formal conceptual structure for HFE. It is intended as a contribution to cultural history because (a) ours is a technological civilization, and (b) one cannot understand technology outside of the various disciplines that make up that technology. A disciplinary history is highly specialized, but the author maintains that HFE is distinctive in being the only discipline that relates humans to technology. Other behavioral disciplines like anthropology have little connection with technology, and this is what makes HFE important in the present historical era.

chapter 1|32 pages

Introduction to HFE

chapter 2|56 pages

The Conceptual Structure of HFE

chapter 3|57 pages

The System as a Fundamental Construct

chapter 4|37 pages

The Formal History of HFE

chapter 5|51 pages

The Informal History of HFE

chapter 6|42 pages

Characteristics of HFE Research

chapter 7|46 pages

Special Interests Within HFE

chapter 8|34 pages

HFE Practice

chapter 9|6 pages

A Commentary on the Big Issues