Document 11194712

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TECHNICAL PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Cochair

Cheryl A. Bolstad

Cochair

Christopher B. Mayhorn

General Sessions

Cleotilde Gonzalez

Guest Lectures

Michael J. Kalsher

Posters

Camilla C. Knott

Quality

Arathi Sethumadhavan

Special Sessions

Ronald L. Boring

Student Forum

Christopher Brill

Workshops

Michelle L. Rogers

TECHNICAL GROUP PROGRAM CHAIRS

Aerospace Systems

Gloria L. Calhoun

Aging

Kelly Caine

Augmented Cognition

Lee W. Sciarini

Cognitive Engineering &

Decision Making

Jennifer J. Ockerman

Communications

Robert A. King

Computer Systems

Kenneth R. Ohnemus

Education

Esa M. Rantanen

Environmental Design

Karen Jacobs

Forensics Professional

Kenneth E. Nemire

Health Care

Robert Rauschenberger

Human Performance

Modeling

Steven J. Landry

Individual Differences in

Performance

James L. Szalma

Industrial Ergonomics

Peter W. Johnson

Internet

Marc L. Resnick

Macroergonomics

Enid Montague

Perception & Performance

Rebecca A. Grier

Product Design

Ameersing Luximon

Safety

Mary F. Lesch

Surface Transportation

Gregory M. J. Fitch

System Development

Daniel L. Welch

Test & Evaluation

Pamela A. Savage-Knepshield

Training

Dennis A. Vincenzi

Virtual Environments

Hari Thiruvengada

H U M A N F A C TO R S A N D E R G O N O M I C S S O C I E T Y 5 6 T H A N N U A L M E E T I N G i

56TH ANNUAL MEETING HOST COMMITTEE

Chair

Marc L. Resnick

Vice Chairs

David N. Aurelio

Eric M. Jones

Hospitality

Sylvain Bruni

Newsletter

Hayley J. Davison Reynolds

Publicity

Christopher R. Reid

Robert F. Stark

Scavenger Hunt

Jason C. Ryan

Sponsorships

Juliann B. Farrar

Student Activities

Samiullah Durrani

Student Lounge

Erin M. Davis

Katarina A. Morowsky

Student Volunteers

Jo Rain Jardina

Shannon Roberts

Technical Tours

Rebecca Grayhem

Usability Day

Andy Chang

HUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIETY OFFICERS

President

Mica R. Endsley

Immediate Past President

Anthony D. Andre

President-Elect

Eduardo Salas

Secretary-Treasurer

Valerie J. Rice

Immediate Past Secretary-

Treasurer

Ronald G. Shapiro

Secretary-Treasurer-Elect

Kermit G. Davis

Executive Council

At-Large Members

Cheryl A. Bolstad

Nancy J. Cooke

Paul A. Green

John F. Kelley

John D. Lee

Marc L. Resnick

HFES DIVISION CHAIRS

HFES Institute

Bruce Bradtmiller

Internal Affairs

James P. Bliss

Outreach

Scott A. Shappell

Professionalism

S. Camille Peres

Scientific Publications

C. Melody Carswell i i

HFES STAFF

Executive Director

Lynn Strother, CAE

Administrative Assistant

Susan Marschner

Communications Director

Lois Smith

Managing Editor

Cameron Wile

Communications Assistant

Cara Quinlan

Member Services

Director

Carlos de Falla

Member Services

Coordinator

Stefanie Alexander

H U M A N F A C TO R S A N D E R G O N O M I C S S O C I E T Y 5 6 T H A N N U A L M E E T I N G

2012 SUSTAINING MEMBERS OF THE

HUMAN FACTORS AND ERGONOMICS SOCIETY

DIAMOND

Battelle

David Wourms

William S. Marras

VRC Corporation

Donald Vreuls

PLATINUM

Aptima, Inc.

Daniel Serfaty

SILVER

Anacapa Sciences, Inc.

Douglas H. Harris

DSO National Laboratories

Lee Kok Ho

Exponent Failure Analysis

Associates, Inc.

Internet Café

Ergotron

Herman Miller

Lanyards

User Centric

Mentor-Mentee Brown Bag Lunches

Bentley University (Wednesday)

Student Lounge and Scavenger Hunt

Aerospace Systems Technical Group

Aptima

Board of Certification in Professional

Ergonomics (BCPE)

Charles River Analytics

Council of Technical Groups

Farm

David M. Harrah

Honeywell

Liberty Mutual

SPONSORS

Medtronic, Inc.

MIT AeroAstro

MIT Age Lab and New England

Transportation Center

MIT Humans and Automation Lab

MIT Student Chapter

New England Chapter

Puget Sound Chapter

Surface Transportation Technical Group

Tufts University

Wacom, Inc.

Anna M. Wichansky

User Experience Day

Bentley University Design and Usability Center

Computer Systems Technical Group

Emerson Process Management

Keylime Interactive

(Future Leaders Panel Reception)

H U M A N F A C TO R S A N D E R G O N O M I C S S O C I E T Y 5 6 T H A N N U A L M E E T I N G i i i

i v

EXHIBITORS

(As of September 18, 2012)

2013 Symposium on Human Factors and

Ergonomics in Health Care: Advancing the

Cause . . . . . . . . . . . Galleria Exhibit Hall

AMTI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 16

Arrington Research, Inc. . . . . . Booth 30

Ashgate Publishing Company . . Booths 11–12

(see ad on page 58)

ASL Eyetracking . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 4

BIOPAC Systems, Inc. . . . . . . . Booth 15

Board of Certification in Professional

Ergonomics (BCPE). . . . . . . Booth 18

CRC Press/Taylor & Francis . . Booths 1–2

(see ad on page 62)

Delsys, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 22

Ergoneers GmbH . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 9

Eyetech Digital Systems . . . . . . Booth 25

Eyetellect. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TT9

EyeTracking, Inc.. . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 3

HFES 57th Annual Meeting. . . TT2

HFES Education Technical

Group. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TT7–8

HFES Institute. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booths 23–24

Iowa State University. . . . . . . . . TT4

(see ad on inside front cover)

LC Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 28

NASA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booths 7–8

Naval Aerospace Experimental

Psychology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 29

Noldus Information Technology . Booth 20

(see ad on page 63)

Polhemus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 21

(see ad on page 64)

Pro-Line . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 17

Qualisys Motion Systems. . . . . . TT10

SAGE Publications . . . . . . . . . . Booths 5 –6

Seeing Machines . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 19

SensoMotoric Instruments, Inc. . Booth 10

Smart Eye . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 27

Tobii Technology. . . . . . . . . . . . . Booth 26

U. of Michigan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TT1

VELA Sitting Solutions . . . . . . Booths 13–14

CONTENTS

Registration & Facilities

Meeting Facilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

Registration Desk Location and Hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

On-Site Event Tickets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

Lunch and Refreshments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

Resources

Follow @HFES 2012 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

HFES Central . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

Career Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

Job Notices at the Annual Meeting. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

Internet Café . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

Newsletter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Student Lounge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Audiovisual Preview Room . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Volunteers Assignment Room . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Exhibits

Location and Hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Exhibitor List . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iv

Prize Drawings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Events

Student Career & Professional Development Day . . . . 2

National Ergonomics Month Expo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

First-Timers & Fellows Reception . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Gala Opening Reception . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

Student Reception . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Early-Career Professionals Reception. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

2012 Awardees and Fellows Reception. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

User Experience Day . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

HFES Scavenger Hunt. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Annual Business Meeting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Pioneers of Cognitive Engineering Sessions

& Reception . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Mentor-Mentee Brown Bag Luncheons . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Program Reminders

Download the Program App. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Annual Meeting Survey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Poster Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

University Lab Posters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3

Policies

Attendee Badges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

Audiotaping, Photographing, and Videotaping Policies . . 4

Birds of a Feather Room . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

Cell Phones and Pagers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

Nonsmoking Policy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

Proceedings CD-ROM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

Room Capacity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

Meetings

HFES Groups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

Other Groups. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5

HFES Institute (ISO & ANSI Standards Committees) . 5

Technical Groups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

Social Events

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Technical Tours

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Technical Program

Workshops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

Technical Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

Program at a Glance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Center spread

Participant Index

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51

Personal Planner

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57

Advertisers

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58

Facility Map

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inside Back Cover

H U M A N F A C TO R S A N D E R G O N O M I C S S O C I E T Y 5 6 T H A N N U A L M E E T I N G

REGISTRATION &

FACILITIES

Meeting Facilities

All Annual Meeting functions (other than tours) will be held at the Westin Boston Waterfront. A map of the meeting space may be found on the inside back cover of this program and is displayed on signs throughout the hotel.

Registration Desk Location and Hours

Registration is open during the following hours in the

Grand Ballroom Foyer on the Concourse Level:

Sunday

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

3:00 to 6:00 p.m.

7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.

7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon

On-Site Event Tickets

For those events not sold out in advance, tickets for tours and 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.

Lunch and Refreshments

A lunch bar will be available between 11:30 a.m. and

1:30 p.m. on Tuesday in the Harbor Ballroom Foyer

(Conference Level), and on Wednesday and Thursday in the Galleria Exhibit Hall (Galleria Level). The lunch bar is CASH-ONLY. There are two ATMs located for your convenience in the hotel lobby.

Beverage breaks will take place each morning

(10:00–10:30) and afternoon (3:00–3:30). On Monday and Friday morning, beverage breaks will be held adjacent to meeting rooms. The Grand Ballroom Foyer

(Concourse Level) will be the location for the morning break on Tuesday. The Galleria Exhibit Hall (Galleria

Level) will be the location for the Tuesday afternoon break and both morning and afternoon breaks on

Wednesday and Thursday.

RESOURCES

Follow @HFES2012

Check out the Annual Meeting Twitter feed

@HFES2012 and post at #HFES2012.

HFES Central

HFES staff will be present at a counter across from the Internet Café (Commonwealth Foyer, Concourse

Level) to provide information on membership, publications, and services. Nonmembers who are registered for the full week are entitled to HFES member prices for orders placed at the meeting.

Career Center

The Career Center is located in Commonwealth B/C

(Concourse Level) and is open during the following hours:

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

1:00 to 6:00 p.m.

8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Subscribers to the HFES Online Career Center may reserve booths and/or tables at the On-Site Career

Cen ter, subject to availability. If you have not already reserved space, you may sign up at the Career Center.

The scheduling of formal or informal 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

HFES will collect résumés for companies with a job posting in the Career Center but not interviewing at the Annual Meeting. The charge for this service is $150.

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

Cen ter for a $75 fee. Job seekers will be directed to send their résumés directly to the organization advertising the job.

Internet Café

Computers with Internet access will be available in the Commonwealth Foyer (Concourse Level) during the following hours:

Sunday

Monday and Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

3:00 to 6:00 p.m.

7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon

TIME LIMIT: 10 minutes per user per session.

Cork message boards will also be available for posting hard-copy messages and announcements about meetings and events.

General

Information

G E N E R A L I N F O R M AT I O N 1

General

Information

Newsletter

The daily newsletter, The Patriot Press, containing im portant information about the meeting program and events, is available in the registration area, Career Cen ter, Exhibit Hall, and various other locations. Articles or news items may be dropped off at the Registration

Counter (Grand Ballroom Foyer, Concourse Level).

The newsletter editorial office is located in the Paine

Room (Lobby Level). Send potential articles to hayley@ll.mit.edu.

Student Lounge

The Student Lounge, located in the Hancock Room

(Lobby Level), has been set aside for students to meet, network, participate in special student activities, and relax. Hours are

Monday through Thursday 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.

Friday 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon

Audiovisual Preview Room

The Revere Room (Lobby Level) has been reserved for presenters who wish to preview their audiovisual materials. Computers will be available for AV preview only. Preview hours are

Monday and Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.

7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

7:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon

Volunteers Assignment Room

Student volunteers who have been assigned duties should check in with Volunteer Coordinators Shannon

Roberts and Jo Rain Jardina in the Hale Room on the

Mezzanine Level.

EXHIBITS

Location and Hours

All attendees are encouraged to visit the exhibits, located in the Galleria Exhibit Hall (Galleria Level).

Refreshment breaks will be held in the Exhibit Hall on Tuesday afternoon and on Wednesday and Thursday mornings and afternoons. A cash-only lunch bar will be available between 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. on Tues day in the Harbor Ballroom Foyer (Conference Level), and on Wednesday and Thursday in the Galleria

Exhibit Hall.

Exhibition hours are as follows:

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

3:00 to 6:00 p.m.

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

8:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

2

Exhibitor List

The list of exhibitors appears on page iv.

Prize Drawings

HFES will be giving away two 2013 membership re newals and two registrations for the 57th Annual Meet ing in San Diego, September 30–October 4, 2013. To enter a drawing to win these prizes, fill out the entry slips found in your portfolio bag and deposit them in the appropriate box inside the main entrance of the

Galleria Exhibit Hall. In addition, some exhibitors will be offering prizes for the drawing; entry slips for these prizes may be obtained at each participating exhibitor’s booth.

All drawings will be held on Wednesday and Thursday during the mid-morning refreshment break (10:00–10:30 a.m.). Names of winners will be posted on a sign board in the Galleria Exhibit Hall. You must be present to claim your prize. Prizes are not transferable.

EVENTS

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 Harbor Ballroom II (Conference

Level). See page 8 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,

October 22, from 4:45 to 6:15 p.m., in the Harbor Ball room Foyer (Conference Level). The Expo will also feature several entertaining and interactive booths with live demonstrations illustrating successful human factors/ergonomics outreach activities. Stop by at any time during the session to peruse the booths and learn how you can contribute to NEM this year.

First-Timers & Fellows Reception

If this is your first time at an HFES Annual Meeting, take advantage of this opportunity to be greeted by

HFES Fellows and Executive Council members and officers. Come to Harbor Ballroom I/II (Conference

Level) on Monday at 5:30 p.m. to enjoy hors d’oeuvres and networking prior to the Gala Opening Reception.

Gala Opening Reception

Join friends and colleagues in the Grand Ballroom (Con course Level) from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. for this festive kickoff reception. See old friends and meet new ones while you enjoy beverages and delicious food. Guest tickets are available for those attending only Monday

G E N E R A L I N F O R M AT I O N

workshops. All guest tickets must be purchased at the

Registration Counter prior to 7:00 p.m. on Monday,

October 22.

Student Reception

All students attending the Annual Meeting are invited to a reception on Tuesday, October 23, from 5:00 to 6:00 p.m. in Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level). Snacks and a cash bar will be provided.

Early-Career Professionals Reception

Come to Grand Ballroom B (Concourse Level) for this event, on Wednesday from 5:30 to 7:00 p.m (preregistration required). Professionals in their first few years following graduation who are working in industry and academia will network with one another and with prominent HFES members. A short program will target specific topics of concern to early-career professionals.

2012 Awardees and Fellows Reception

This invitation-only event for HFES Fellows, Honorary

Fellows, and 2012 Society-wide award recipients takes place on Wednesday from 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. in the

Faneuil Room (Mezzanine Level).

User Experience Day

User Experience Day is a dedicated track of programming specifically geared for user experience (UX) professionals. The event will take place Wednesday,

October 24, from 8:30 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. in Harbor Ball room I (Conference Level). See http://www.hfes.org/ web/HFESBulletin/aug2012amux.html for a summary of the day’s activities.

HFES Scavenger Hunt

The Scavenger Hunt will be held during the first part of the Annual Meeting. Bring your completed entry form and payment to the Scavenger Hunt desk near the Registration Counter in the Grand Ballroom Foyer

(Concourse Level).

Annual Business Meeting

The Business Meeting will be held on Tuesday,

October 23, from 6:00 to 7:30 p.m. in Grand Ballroom E

(Concourse Level).

Pioneers of Cognitive Engineering

Sessions and Reception

The Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making

Tech nical Group has organized three panels looking at the past, current, and future state of cognitive systems engineering. “The Origins of Cognitive Systems Engi neering: Looking Back After 30 Years (CE1)” takes place on Tuesday at 10:30 a.m.; “Origins and Destina tions: 30 Years of Cognitive Systems Engineering

(CE8)” will be on Wednesday at 1:30 p.m.; and the third panel immediately follows the CEDM-TG business meeting and reception on Wednesday (3:30–5:00 p.m.): “Reflections on 30 Years of Cognitive Systems

Engi neer ing: Progress and Opportunities.” Locations are shown in the Technical Program section.

Mentor-Mentee Brown Bag Luncheons

A series of mentor-mentee luncheons will be held during the meeting 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 dynamic, interactive sessions enable students and young professionals to freely 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 Alcot Room (Mezzanine Level).

Prior to the Annual Meeting, details were provided to all attendees who reserved a space with Haydee

Cuevas. A waiting list will be available at HFES Cen tral near the Internet Café (Commonwealth Foyer,

Concourse Level).

PROGRAM REMINDERS

Download the Program App

Go to the iTunes Store and the Android App Market place to download the Guidebook mobile program app.

Annual Meeting Survey

The Annual Meeting Survey will be sent via e-mail to all attendees immediately after the meeting. Please watch your e-mail for the link to the survey.

Poster Sessions

Posters are available for viewing in the Galleria Exhibit

Hall in four 90-minute sessions. See the program schedule on the following pages for lists of the posters to be presented.

University Lab Posters

University lab posters will be on display in the posters hall on Tuesday from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m.; Wednesday from

8:30 to 10:00 a.m. and 1:30 to 3:00 p.m.; and on Thurs day from 8:30 to 10:00 a.m. in the Galleria Exhibit Hall.

General

Information

G E N E R A L I N F O R M AT I O N 3

General

Information

POLICIES

Attendee Badges

All persons attending workshops, technical sessions, exhibits, tours, receptions, and other events must wear their registration badges. Attendees and guests may register for Annual Meeting events in the Grand Ball room Foyer.

Audiotaping, Photographing, and

Videotaping Policies

Attendees are not permitted to take photos or make audiotape or videotape recordings of speakers or their visual aids, or exhibitors and their displays, without prior permission from HFES and the speakers or exhib i tors. Permission forms are available at HFES Central

(Commonwealth Foyer, Concourse Level). Please complete a form for each presentation you wish to tape, obtain the speaker(s)’ signature(s), and return it to HFES

Central.

Registration and attendance at, or participation in, the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual

Meet ing constitutes an agreement by the registrant to allow HFES to use and distribute the registrant’s photographic image in printed promotional materials

(e.g., brochures, advertising) and in electronic images on the HFES Web site, in promotional materials (e.g., e-mails), and in HFES periodicals and newsletters.

Birds of a Feather Room

The Griffin Room (Conference 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, although a few meetings have been pre-reserved.

Cell Phones and Pagers

Please turn off or mute all cell phones, PDAs, and pagers while attending sessions.

Nonsmoking Policy

Smoking is not permitted inside the Westin Boston

Waterfront convention space or on technical tours.

Proceedings CD-ROM

All registered attendees have been provided with a

CD-ROM containing the proceedings. Workstations are available in the Internet Café (Commonwealth

Foyer, Concourse Level) for viewing the CD-ROM and printing out individual papers. If supplies allow, additional CD-ROMs may also be purchased at HFES

Central.

4

Annual Meeting proceedings papers will also be available free to members via SAGE Journals Online in early

November. To access the content, log in at hfes.org

with your membership login and password and select the appropriate link on the Welcome page.

Room Capacity

Room selection for sessions is based on estimated attendance and facility restrictions. All efforts have been made to ensure that room capacity is adequate.

MEETINGS

HFES Groups

Saturday, October 20

HFES Executive Council

7:30 a.m.–6:00 p.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Sunday, October 21

HFES Executive Council

7:30 a.m.–6:00 p.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Tuesday, October 23

Human Factors Editorial Board (lunch)

12:00 noon–1:15 p.m.

Sauciety Restaurant (Lobby Level)

Local Chapter Presidents (lunch)

12:00 noon–1:15 p.m.

Lewis (Conference Level)

Education & Training Committee Workforce Issues

Task Force

3:30–5:00 p.m.

Executive Boardroom (Mezzanine Level)

Annual Business Meeting

6:00–7:30 p.m.

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Wednesday, October 24

HFES Scientific Publications Committee (breakfast)

7:15–8:15 a.m.

Executive Boardroom (Mezzanine Level)

Ergonomics in Design Editorial Board (lunch)

12:00 noon–1:15 p.m.

Adams (Mezzanine Level)

Student Chapter Presidents (lunch)

12:00 noon–1:15 p.m.

Faneuil (Mezzanine Level)

G E N E R A L I N F O R M AT I O N

Thursday, October 25

Education & Training Committee (breakfast)

7:00–8:15 a.m.

Independence Boardroom (Conference Level)

Journal of Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making

Editorial Board (lunch)

12:00 noon–1:15 p.m.

Adams (Mezzanine Level)

Combating Decreases in U.S. Graduate Program

Funding

1:30–3:00 p.m.

Faneuil (Mezzanine Level)

Friday, October 26

Technical Program Committee (breakfast)

8:15–10:15 a.m.

Adams (Mezzanine Level)

Other Groups

Sunday, October 21

Board of Certification in Professional

Ergonomics Exam

8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.

Adams (Mezzanine Level)

Wednesday, October 24

Tech America Human Systems Integration

(G45) Meeting

3:00–5:00 p.m.

Adams (Mezzanine Level)

HFES Institute (ISO and ANSI

Standards Committees)

Monday, October 22

ISO/TC 159/SC 3/WG 1

9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.

Carlton (Conference Level)

ISO/TC 159/SC 5/WG 5

9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.

Independence Boardroom (Conference Level)

ISO/TC 159/SC 3 Delegates’ Reception

(Invitation-Only)

5:00-7:00 p.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Tuesday, October 23

ISO/TC 159/SC 5/WG 4

9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.

Independence Boardroom (Conference Level)

ISO/TC 159/SC 3/WG 1

1:00–5:00 p.m.

Carlton (Conference Level)

Wednesday, October 24

ANSI/HFES 100 Committee

8:30–10:30 a.m.

Adams (Mezzanine Level)

U.S. TAG to ISO/TC 159/SC 3

1:00–5:00 p.m.

Carlton (Conference Level)

U.S. TAG to ISO/TC 159

1:30–2:15 p.m.

Bulfinch (Mezzanine Level)

U.S. TAG to ISO/TC 159/SC 5

2:15–3:00 p.m.

Bulfinch (Mezzanine Level)

HFES Institute Board of Supervisors

3:30–5:30 p.m.

Independence Boardroom (Conference Level)

Thursday, October 25

ISO/TC 159/SC 3

9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.

Carlton (Conference Level)

ANSI/HFES 100 Input Devices Subcommittee

12:00 noon–1:00 p.m.

Griffin (Conference Level)

Friday, October 26

ISO/TC 159/SC 3

9:00 a.m.–12:00 noon

Carlton (Conference Level)

General

Information

G E N E R A L I N F O R M AT I O N 5

General

Information

Technical Groups

Monday, October 22

Council of Technical Groups

3:30–5:00 p.m.

Faneuil (Mezzanine Level)

Tuesday, October 23

Individual Differences in Performance

(lunch; reserve at HFES Central)

12:00 noon-1:30 p.m.

Faneuil (Mezzanine Level)

Product Design

5:00–5:30 p.m.

Stone (Lobby Level)

System Development

5:00–6:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Test & Evaluation

(breakfast; reserve at HFES Central)

7:30–8:30 a.m.

Adams (Mezzanine Level)

Wednesday, October 24

Aerospace Systems

3:30–5:30 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom II (Conference Level)

Aging (lunch; reserve at HFES Central)

12:00 noon–1:30 p.m.

Lewis (Conference Level)

Augmented Cognition

3:30–5:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

3:30–5:15 p.m.

Grand Ballroom C/D (Concourse Level)

Communications

3:30–4:30 p.m.

Commonwealth A (Concourse Level)

Computer Systems/Internet

3:30–5:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Education (breakfast; reserve at HFES Central)

7:30–8:30 a.m.

Lewis (Conference Level)

Environmental Design/Macroergonomics

3:45–5:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

6

Forensics Professional

4:30–5:30 p.m.

Webster (Lobby Level)

Health Care

3:15–4:30 p.m.

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Human Performance Modeling

5:30–6:30 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Industrial Ergonomics

3:30–4:30 p.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Internet/Computer Systems

3:30–5:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Macroergonomics/Environmental Design

3:45–5:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Perception & Performance

(lunch; reserve at HFES Central)

12:00 noon–1:30 p.m.

Sauciety Restaurant (Lobby Level)

Safety

5:30–6:30 p.m.

Otis (Lobby Level)

Surface Transportation

5:00–6:30 p.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Training

3:30–5:30 p.m.

Stone (Lobby Level)

Virtual Environments

3:30–4:30 p.m.

Otis (Lobby Level)

Thursday, October 25

Technical Group Program Chairs

5:15–6:30 p.m.

Adams (Mezzanine Level)

G E N E R A L I N F O R M AT I O N

SOCIAL EVENTS

Monday, October 22

First-Timers & Fellows Reception

5:30–6:30 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom I/II (Conference Level)

Gala Opening Reception

6:30–9:30 p.m.

Grand Ballroom (Concourse Level)

Tuesday, October 23

Student Reception

5:00–6:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Wednesday, October 24

Early-Career Professionals Reception

5:30–7:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom B (Concourse Level)

Fellows and 2012 Society-Wide Award Recipients

Reception

7:30–9:00 p.m.

Faneuil (Mezzanine Level)

TECHNICAL TOURS

Buses will begin loading from the hotel lobby 15 minutes prior to the departure times listed below. Tickets for events not sold out may be purchased at the Regi stration Counter. Tickets must be presented when buses are loading. At press time, the following tours were scheduled to take place; however, please check the daily on-site newsletter and the poster boards in the registration area for updates about canceled events.

Tuesday, October 23

T1, Volpe Center

8:30–10:30 a.m.

T2, Volpe Center

10:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m.

T3, Massachusettes Institute of Technology Man

Vehicle Laboratory (MVL), Humans and Auto ma tion Laboratory (HAL), and Aerospace

Controls Laboratory (ACL)

12:30–4:30 p.m.

Wednesday, October 24

T4, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lincoln

Laboratory

7:30 a.m.–1:00 p.m.

T5, Center for Clinical Investigation Clinical

Research Center at Brigham and Women’s

Hospital

8:30–10:30 a.m.

T6, Continuum

12:15–5:00 p.m.

Thursday, October 25

T7, Liberty Mutual Research Institute

7:45 a.m.–12:30 p.m.

T8, Fidelity Investments Usability Lab

9:45 a.m.–12:15 p.m.

T9, Massachusetts General Hospital

1:00–5:00 p.m.

T10, Tactable

1:15-4:00 p.m.

Key to Abbreviations Used in This Program

S

SS

SF

ST

SD

ME

PL

PP

PD

POS

TE

T

VE

WK

I

ID

IE

GS

HC

HP

AS

A

AC

CE

C

Aerospace Systems

Aging

Augmented Cognition

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Communications

CS Computer Systems

DEM Demonstrations

E

ED

FP

Education

Environmental Design

Forensics Professional

General Sessions

Health Care

Human Performance Modeling

Individual Differences in Performance

Industrial Ergonomics

Internet

Macroergonomics

Plenary Session

Perception & Performance

Product Design

Posters

Safety

Special Sessions

Student Forum

Surface Transportation

System Development

Test & Evaluation

Training

Virtual Environments

Workshops

General

Information

G E N E R A L I N F O R M AT I O N 7

Monday

Oct. 22

8

TECHNICAL PROGRAM

Full-Day Workshops

9:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m.

Monday, October 22

Approach

8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m.

William F. Moroney, U. of Dayton

Monday, October 22, 9:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m.

Alcott (Mezzanine Level)

Workshops

NOTE: Underenrolled workshops are subject to cancellation.

Check signs in the meeting registration area for a list of cancelled workshops.

Morning-Only Workshops

8:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

WK10 – Designing to Enhance Situation

Awareness

Debra G. Jones and Jennifer Riley, SA Technolo gies, Inc.

Monday, October 22, 9:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m.

Adams (Mezzanine Level)

WK1 – Introduction to R and Basic Statistical

Analysis

Linda Boyle, U. of Washington; John D. Lee,

U. of Wisconsin-Madison

Monday, October 22, 8:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Webster (Lobby Level)

WK11 – How To Be an Effective Human Factors/

Ergonomics Expert Witness

Marc L. Resnick, Bentley U.; H. Harvey Cohen and Joseph Cohen, Error Analysis

Monday, October 22, 9:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m.

Stone (Lobby Level)

WK3 – Cognitive Neuroscience for the Human

Factors Practitioner

Chris Forsythe, Sandia National Labs

Monday, October 22, 8:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Douglas (Mezzanine Level)

WK4 – Mindfulness in the Workplace: Calm,

Composed, Confident, and Competent

Valerie J. Rice, U.S. Army Research Lab; Andrew

S. Imada, A. S. Imada & Assoc.; ConneMara

Bazley, JimConna Inc.

Monday, October 22, 8:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Otis (Lobby Level)

Monday, October 22

9:00 a.m.–3:30 p.m.

Afternoon-Only Workshops

1:30–5:00 p.m.

WK5 – Data Exploration and Visualization With R

John D. Lee, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Linda

Boyle, U. of Washington

Monday, October 22, 1:30–5:00 p.m.

Webster (Lobby Level)

WK6 – Beyond the Usability Lab: Tools, Tips, and

Best Practices for Remote Usability Testing

Richard L. Horst and Kristen M. Davis,

UserWorks, Inc.

Monday, October 22, 1:30–5:00 p.m.

Otis (Lobby Level)

SF1 – STUDENT CAREER AND

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT DAY

Alternative Format

Monday, October 22, 9:00 a.m.– 3:30 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom II (Conference Level)

Student Forum

Welcome and Introduction

9:00 a.m.

Chair: Kim-Phuong L. Vu, California State U., Long

Beach, and Chair, Student Affairs Committee

Panel 1: HFES Fellows and Leaders: Preparing for a Successful Career in Human Factors/

Ergonomics

9:05–10:15 a.m.

Chair: Ronald G. Shapiro, Consultant; Cochair:

Anthony (Tony) D. Andre, Interface Analysis Assoc.

Panelists: Anthony (Tony) D. Andre, Interface Analysis

Assoc.; Nancy J. Cooke, Arizona State U.; and Lauren

Reinerman-Jones, U. of Central Florida

Panel 2: A Day in the Life

10:45 a.m.–12:00 noon

Chair: Haydee M. Cuevas, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical

U.; Cochair: Richard J. Gardner, Boeing Co.

Panelists: Heather C. Lum, Penn State Erie; Joseph

Keebler, Wichita State U.; Arathi Sethumadhavan,

Medtronic, Inc.; Farilee Mintz, Booz Allen Hamilton;

Paul Havig, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; and Sherry

Chappell, National Transportation Safety Board

O C TO B E R 2 2 – M O N D AY

Lunch

12:00 noon–1:30 p.m.

Panel 3: Selecting an Academic Versus Industrial

Career in Human Factors, sponsored by the

George Mason U. Student Chapter

1:30–2:45 p.m.

Chair: Nicole Werner, George Mason U.

Panelists: Deborah Boehm-Davis, George Mason U.;

Valerie Gawron, MITRE Corp.; Richard Holden,

Vanderbilt U.; and Robyn Kim, Exponent

Board of Certification in Professional Ergonomics

Presentation to Students

2:45–3:15 p.m.

Monday, October 22

3:30–5:00 p.m.

Technical Group Business Meeting

Council of Technical Groups

Faneuil (Mezzanine Level)

3:30–5:00 p.m.

Monday, October 22

4:45–6:15 p.m.

SS1 – NATIONAL ERGONOMICS MONTH

EXPO

Alternative Format

Monday, October 22, 4:45–6:15 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom Foyer (Conference Level)

Cochairs: Joseph Keebler and Alan Hedge, NEM

Committee Cochairs

Tuesday, October 23

7:30–8:30 a.m.

Technical Group

Networking/Business Meeting

Test & Evaluation

7:30–8:30 a.m. (breakfast; reserve at HFES Central)

Adams (Mezzanine Level)

O C TO B E R 2 3 – T U E S D AY

Tuesday, October 23

8:00–10:00 a.m.

PL – OPENING PLENARY SESSION

Tuesday, October 23, 8:00–10:00 a.m.

Grand Ballroom (Concourse Level)

Chairs: Cheryl A. Bolstad, SA Technologies, and

Christopher B. Mayhorn, North Carolina State U.

1.

Presentation of HFES Fellows

2.

Presentation of HFES Awards

3.

Presidential Address: Mica R. Endsley, Building

Bridges to the Future of Human Factors &

Ergonomics

4.

Keynote Address: Kathy Jenkins, MD, MPH,

Boston Children’s Hospital, Human Factors and Health Care: Perspective of a Pediatric

Cardiologist and Safety Leader

Tuesday, October 23

10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

AS1 – ENHANCING SAFETY IN AVIATION

SYSTEMS

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Stone (Lobby Level)

Aerospace Systems

Chair: Paul Krois, Federal Aviation Admin.; Cochair:

Eric Geiselman, Air Force Research Lab

1.

Amy L. Alexander and Tom G. Reynolds,

Massachusetts Inst. of Technology Lincoln Lab,

Estimating the Monetizable Safety Benefits of

Prototype Air Traffic Control Technologies

2.

Katherine A. Berry, Michael W. Sawyer, and

Edward M. Austrian, Fort Hill Group, LLC,

Behind the Scenes of NextGen: Describing the Impact of NextGen Operational Improve ments on the Traffic Manager

3.

Michael W. Sawyer, Katherine A. Berry, and

Edward M. Austrian, Fort Hill Group, LLC,

Analysis of New Proposed Air Traffic

Control Alerts in the NextGen Midterm

4.

Kim-Phuong L. Vu, Hector Silva, Jason Ziccardi,

Corey A. Morgan, Gregory Morales, Tristan

Grigoleit, Samuel Lee, Ariana Kiken, and

Thomas Z. Strybel, California State U., Long

Beach; Vernol Battiste, San Jose State U./NASA

Ames Research Ctr., How Does Reliance on

Automated Tools During Learning Influence

Students’ Air Traffic Management Skills

When the Tools Fail?

9

Tuesday

Oct. 23

Tuesday

Oct. 23

5.

Maggie J. Ma, Boeing Co., Use a Tested

Approach for Risk Management and Safety

Enhancement: Maintenance Line Operations

Safety Assessment (M-LOSA)

CE1 – THE ORIGINS OF COGNITIVE SYSTEMS

ENGINEERING: LOOKING BACK AFTER 30

YEARS

Discussion Panel

Tuesday, October 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Robert Hoffman, Inst. for Human and Machine

Cognition

Panelists: Richard W. Pew, Raytheon BBN Technolo gies; Thomas B. Sheridan, Massachusetts Inst. of Tech nology; Philip J. Smith, Ohio State U.; Emilie Roth,

Roth Cognitive Engineering; David D. Woods, Ohio

State U.

E1 – RESEARCH ON HF/E PEDAGOGY

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Commonwealth Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Education

Chair: Thomas K. Ferris, Texas A&M U.; Cochair:

Jessica K. Cruit, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.

1.

Denise Finch, WorkRite Medical Assoc.; Karen

Jacobs, Boston U., Online Education: Best

Practices to Promote Learning

2.

Tonya Smith-Jackson, Tamal Bose, and Carl

Dietrich, Virginia Polytechnic Inst. and State U.;

George Hsieh and Chensheng Xin, Norfolk State

U.; Daniel DePoy and Ratchaneekorn Thamvichai,

Virginia Polytechnic Inst. and State U., Evalua tion of Integrated and Inclusive Pedagogy for

Cognitive Communications

3.

Ashley Russell, Cambridge Consultants; Daniel

Hannon, Tufts U., A Cognitive Load Approach to Learner-Centered Design of Digital Instruc tional Media and Supporting Accessi bility

Tools

4.

Julie Birckbichler, Taylor Bolt, Christine O’Hara,

Alexa Rinz, Amanda Rollo, Cynthia Marshall, and

Benjamin Stephens, Clemson U., Structural

Measures of Undergraduate ePortfolios in

Three Educational Contexts

FP1 – FORENSIC ISSUES IN WARNINGS,

PRODUCTS, AND FALLS

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Webster (Lobby Level)

Forensics Professional

Chair: Michael S. Wogalter, North Carolina State U.;

Cochair: Ilene B. Zackowitz, Vredenburgh & Assoc.

1.

Soyun Kim and Michael S. Wogalter, North

Carolina State U., Most Natural and Propane

(LP) Gas Service Users Report Not Having

Electronic Gas Detectors

2.

Alison G. Vredenburgh and Ilene B. Zackowitz,

Vredenburgh & Assoc., Inc., Case Study: Eval u ating the Design and Warnings on a Tan ning

Bed

3.

Kenneth Nemire, HFE Consulting, LLC, Using

Orange Traffic Cones to Warn of Pedestrian

Hazards

4.

William J. Vigilante, Robson Forensic, Inc.; Patrick

Reeves, St. Joseph’s U., Human Factors Related to Programmable Thermostats: Consumers’

Knowledge and Perceptions Related to Product

Use and Hazards

5.

Kenneth Nemire, HFE Consulting, LLC, Walk ing Backwards Without Looking: An Obser va tional Study

GS1 – PAST PRESIDENT’S FORUM – OUR

FUTURE HF/E PROFESSORS AND RE -

SEARCH ERS: IS ANYONE IN THE PIPELINE?

Discussion Panel

Tuesday, October 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

General Sessions; cosponsored by Education

Chair: Anthony D. (Tony) Andre, San Jose State U.

Panelists: Raja Parasuraman, George Mason U.; Esa M.

Rantanen, Rochester Inst. of Technology; James L.

Szalma, U. of Central Florida; Francis T. Durso,

Georgia Inst. of Technology

Plan to Attend

Sept. 30–Oct. 4

2013

San Diego, CA

10 O C TO B E R 2 3 – T U E S D AY

HC1 – WHAT CAN HUMAN FACTORS

CONTRI BUTE TO IMPROVE ELECTRONIC

HEALTH RECORD USABILITY AND PATIENT

SAFETY?

Discussion Panel

Tuesday, October 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: Robert Schumacher, User Centric, Inc.; Cochair:

Robert North, Human-Centered Strategies

Panelists: Robert North, Human-Centered Strategies;

Matthew Quinn, National Inst. of Standards and

Tech nology; Emily S. Patterson, Ohio State U.;

Laura G. Militello, Applied Decision Science, LLC;

Rollin J. Fairbanks, MedStar Inst. for Innovation; M.

Chris Gibbons, Johns Hopkins U.

ID1 – MULTIDISCIPLINARY CONCEPTS IN

ERGONOMIC DESIGN AND INDIVIDUAL

DIFFERENCES IN PERFORMANCE

Discussion Panel

Tuesday, October 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Douglas (Mezzanine Level)

Individual Differences

Chair: Krystyna Gielo-Perczak, U. of Connecticut;

Cochair: James Szalma, U. of Central Florida

Panelists: Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central Florida;

William S. Marras, Ohio State U.; Paolo Bonato,

Harvard Medical School; Waldemar Karwowski, U. of

Central Florida

IE1 – TABLETS, KEYBOARDS, POINTING

DEVICES, AND COMPUTER WORK

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Harbor Ballroom II (Conference Level)

Industrial Ergonomics

Chair: Carolyn Sommerich, Ohio State U.; Cochair:

Michael Bartha, Hewlett-Packard

1.

Jeong Ho Kim and Lovenoor Aulck, U. of Wash ing ton; Michael C. Bartha and Christy A. Harper,

Hewlett-Packard; Peter W. Johnson, U. of Wash ington, Are There Differences in Force

Exposures and Typing Productivity Between

Touchscreen and Conventional Keyboard?

2.

David J. Feathers and Han Zhang, Cornell U.,

Holding a Multi-Touch Tablet With One Hand:

3-D Modeling and Visualization of Hand and

Wrist Postures

3.

M. Camilleri, B. Chu, and A. Ramesh, U. of Cali fornia, Berkeley; D. Odell, Nokia Research Ctr.;

D. Rempel, U. of California, Berkeley, I ndirect

Touch Pointing With Desktop Computing:

Effects of Trackpad Size and Input Mapping on Performance, Posture, Discomfort, and

Preference

4.

Nancy Black, U. de Moncton; Leon DesRoches and Isabelle Arsenault, Sparx Wellness Inst.,

Observed Postural Variations Across Compu ter Workers During a Day of Sedentary Com puter Work

5.

Jennifer L. Bruno Garza, Harvard U.; Belinda H.

W. Eijckelhof and Maaike A. Huysmans, VU U.

Medi cal Ctr.; Peter W. Johnson, U. of Washington;

Jaap H. van Dieen and Allard J. van der Beek,

VU U. Medical Ctr.; Jack T. Dennerlein, Harvard

U./ Brigham and Women’s Hospital, The Effects of Psychosocial Factors on Trapezius Muscle

Activity Levels During Computer Use

Tuesday

Oct. 23

PD1 – SYNECTICS: A CREATIVE APPROACH

TO PRODUCT INNOVATION

Invited Address

Tuesday, October 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Product Design

Chair: Stanley Caplan, Usability Assoc.; Cochair: Dianne

McMullin, Boeing Co.

Invited Speaker: Joseph S. Giordano, Synecticsworld

PP1 – GETTING USERS’ ATTENTION:

EFFECTIVENESS OF DIFFERENT CUES

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Perception & Performance

Chair: Gina Thomas, U.S. Air Force Academy

1.

Wayne Giang and Catherine M. Burns, U. of

Waterloo, Sonification Discriminability and

Perceived Urgency

2.

Stephanie M. Pratt, Bridget A. Lewis, B. N.

Penaranda, Daniel M. Roberts, Christian Gonzalez, and Carryl L. Baldwin, George Mason U.,

Perceived Urgency Scaling in Tactile Alerts

3.

Bridget Ann Lewis and Carryl L. Baldwin, George

Mason U., Equating Perceived Urgency Across

Auditory, Visual, and Tactile Signals

O C TO B E R 2 3 – T U E S D AY 11

Tuesday

Oct. 23

4.

Julio C. Mateo, 361 Interactive, LLC; Brian D.

Simpson, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Robert H.

Gilkey, Wright State U.; Nandini Iyer, U.S. Air

Force Research Lab; Douglas S. Brungart, Walter

Reed National Military Medical Ctr., Spatial Mul tisensory Cueing to Support Target-Acquisition

Performance

5.

Rebecca A. Kennedy, Brittany L. Anderson-

Montoya, Mark W. Scerbo, Erik Prytz, and Lee A.

Belfore, Old Dominion U.; Alfred Z. Abuhamad,

Stephen S. Davis, and Suneet P. Chauhan, Eastern

Virginia Medical School, The Influence of Visual

Aids on Detecting Early and Late Decelera tions in Maternal-Fetal Heart Rate Patterns

ST1 – DRIVER DISTRACTION AND DROWSY

DRIVING

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Otis (Lobby Level)

Surface Transportation

Chair: Gregory M. Fitch, Virginia Tech Transportation

Inst.; Cochair: Justin F. Morgan, Virginia Tech Trans portation Inst.

1.

Michael Alan Rupp, U. of Central Florida,

Looking Back: Examining the Trends of

Driver Distraction from 2007–2011

2.

Yulan Liang and William J. Horrey, Liberty Mutual

Research Inst. for Safety; Joshua D. Hoffman,

John Deere, Reading While Driving: A Study on Drivers’ Strategies of In-Vehicle Task

Initiation

3.

Bryan Reimer and Bruce Mehler, Massachusetts

Inst. of Technology; Birsen Donmez, U. of Tor onto; Silviu Pala, Denso International America;

Ying Wang, Nan Zhao, Kirsten Olson, John Wenzel, and Joseph F. Coughlin, Massachusetts Inst. of

Technology, A Driving Simulator Study Exam ining Phone Dialing With an iPhone vs. a

Button-Style Flip Phone

4.

Christine E. Yager, Texas Transportation Inst.;

Joel M. Cooper, U. of Utah; Susan T. Chrysler, U.

of Iowa, The Effects of Reading and Writing

Text-Based Messages While Driving

5.

Anthony D. McDonald, U. of Wisconsin-Madison;

Chris Schwarz, National Advanced Driving Simu la tor; John D. Lee, U. of Wisconsin-Madison;

Timothy L. Brown, National Advanced Driving

Simulator, Real-Time Detection of Drowsiness-

Related Lane Departures Using Steering

Wheel Angle

Tuesday, October 23

12:00 noon–1:30 p.m.

Technical Group Networking/

Business Meeting

Individual Differences in Performance

Faneuil (Mezzanine Level)

12:00 noon-1:30 p.m.

Tuesday, October 23

1:30–3:00 p.m.

A1 – HEALTHY AND ENGAGED AGING

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Stone (Lobby Level)

Aging

Chair: Richard Pak, Clemson U.; Cochair: Marita O’Brien,

U. of Alabama-Huntsville

1.

Laura A. Whitlock and Anne Collins McLaughlin,

North Carolina State U., Identifying Usability

Problems of Blood Glucose Tracking Apps for Older Adult Users

2.

Cara Bailey Fausset and Wendy A. Rogers, Georgia

Inst. of Technology, Younger and Older Adults’

Comprehension of Health Risk Probabilities:

Understanding the Relationship Between

Format and Numeracy

3.

A. Leah Zulas, Aaron S. Crandall, Maureen

Schmitter-Edgecombe, and Diane J. Cook,

Washington State U., Caregiver Needs from

Elder Care Assistive Smart Homes: Nursing

Assessment

4.

Joseph Sharit, Sara J. Czaja, Mario A. Hernandez,

Chin Chin Lee, and Samantha Lang, U. of Miami,

Assessing the Usefulness of Software Tools for Aiding Meaningful Access of Internet

Health Information by Older Users

5.

Gina May Tyree and Anne Collins McLaughlin,

North Carolina State U., Older Adult Engage ment in Activities: All Motivations Are Not

Created Equal

12 O C TO B E R 2 3 – T U E S D AY

AC1 – ADVANCES FOR AN AUGMENTED

FUTURE

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom II (Conference Level)

Augmented Cognition

Chair: Chris Foster, Naval Aerospace Medical Inst.;

Cochair: Julie Gilpin-McMinn, MR&D Ergonomics &

Human Factors

1.

John G. Blitch, Colorado State U., An Initial

Investigation of Cognitive Workload in

Unmanned System Operator Training

2.

Kelly Satterfield, Raul Ramirez, Tyler Shaw, and

Raja Parasuraman, George Mason U., Measuring

Workload During a Dynamic Supervisory

Control Task Using Cerebral Blood Flow

Velocity and the NASA-TLX

3.

Tim Halverson, Justin Estepp, and James

Christensen, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Jason

Monnin, Ball Aerospace, Classifying Workload with Eye Movements in a Complex Task

4.

Brian L. Falcone and Raja Parasuraman, George

Mason U., Comparative Effects of First-Person

Shooter Video Game Experience and Brain

Stimulation on Threat Detection Learning

5.

Michael W. Boyce and Peter A. Hancock, U. of

Central Florida, The Interpenetration of Mind and Machine

CE2 – COLLABORATIVE AUTOMATION

ACROSS VARYING TIME SCALES OF

INTERACTION

Discussion Panel

Tuesday, October 23, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Emilie Roth, Roth Cognitive Engineering

Panelists: Missy Cummings, Massachusetts Inst. of

Technology; Christopher Miller, Smart Information

Flow Technologies; Philip Smith, Ohio State U.;

Debra Schreckenghost, TRACLabs, Inc.; Ron Scott,

Raytheon BBN Technologies

CE3 – ADVANCES IN SUPPORT SYSTEM

DESIGN

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom C/D (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Marita O’Brien, U. of Alabama-Huntsville

1.

Nicholas Fortenbery, Michael P. Jenkins, Ann M.

Bisantz, and Jean-François D’Arcy, U. at Buffalo,

SUNY; Michael Farry, Charles River Analytics;

Allen Nagy, Wright State U.; Emilie Roth, Roth

Cogni tive Engineering; Jonathan Pfautz, Charles

River Analytics; Gina Thomas, U.S. Air Force

Research Lab, Perception of Meta-Information

Repre sentation: A Psychophysical Approach

2.

Robert Truxler, Raytheon BBN Technologies;

Emilie Roth, Roth Cognitive Engineering; Ronald

Scott, Raytheon BBN Technologies; Stephen

Smith, Carnegie Mellon U.; Jeffrey Wampler, U.S.

Air Force Research Lab, Designing Collabora tive Automated Planners for Agile Adapta tion to Dynamic Change

3.

Emrah Onal and Mica R. Endsley, SA Technolo gies, Inc., Requirements and Design for Better

Cultural Situation Awareness: Delivering the

Right Information

4.

Kenyon Riddle, Alex Kirlik, Donald Talleur,

Ronald Carbonari, and Yijing Zhang, U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Jon Holbrook, San Jose

State U.; Michael Byrne, Rice U.; David Bauer,

Aptima, Inc.; Bettina Beard, NASA Ames Research

Ctr., A Comparison of Visualization and

Command-Based Decision Aiding in a Simu lated Aircraft Departure Sequencing Task

5.

Robert F. Stark, Charles River Analytics; David D.

Woods, Ohio State U.; Michael Farry, Charles River

Analytics; Alex Morison, Ohio State U.; Wayne

Thornton and Arthur Wollocko, Charles River

Analytics, Visualiza tions and Interaction Methods for Resilient Submarine Decision Support

Tuesday

Oct. 23

ED1 – ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN FOR

SPECIAL POPULATIONS

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Douglas (Mezzanine Level)

Environmental Design

Chair: ConneMara Bazley, JimConna Inc.

1.

Abir Mullick, Georgia Inst. of Technology; Ashok

Kumar, National Inst. of Design, Research and

Design of a Cultural Product: Inclusive

Design of a Squat Latrine

O C TO B E R 2 3 – T U E S D AY 13

Tuesday

Oct. 23

2.

Jacob Viraldo and Barrett S. Caldwell, Purdue U.,

Developing a Unique Research Opportunity in Control Room Alarm Sonification

3.

Rachna Khare, School of Planning and Architec ture; Abir Mullick, Georgia Inst. of Technology,

Universal Design India Principles: A Con textual Derivative for Practice

4.

Chung Sik Kim, Donghun Lee, and Min K.

Chung, Pohang U. of Science and Technology,

Effects of Ramp Slope on Usability When a

Wheelchair Is Propelled by Attendant

5.

Wenjiao Wang, Siwen Liu, Steven Valenziano, and Sharon Joines, North Carolina State U., Wall

Outlet Height Recommendations: Contrast ing

Ambulatory and Wheelchair Users’ Data

6.

Andrew Kwasniak, Joseph Cuadrado, Michael J.

Kuzel, and Jerome Sinocruz, Exponent, Inc.,

Evaluating Public Awareness of Trip Hazards on Outdoor Walkways

GS2 – HUMAN-SYSTEMS INTEGRATION:

HUMAN FACTORS/ERGONOMICS

GONE WILD

Discussion Panel

Tuesday, October 23, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

General Sessions

Chair: Nancy J. Cooke, Arizona State U.

Panelists: Barbara Wanchisen, National Research Coun cil; William S. Marras, Ohio State U.; Sara J. Czaja, U.

of Miami; Richard W. Pew, BBN Technologies; Don

B. Chaffin, U. of Michigan; Andrew S. Imada, A. S.

Imada & Assoc.

HC2 – DESIGN & ERGONOMICS

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: Edmond W. Israelski, Abbott Labs; Cochair:

Christina Mendat, Radius

1.

Kim Gausepohl, Woodrow Winchester, James D.

Arthur, Tonya Smith-Jackson, and Brian Kleiner,

Virginia Polytechnic Inst. and State U., Context

Matters: Design Guidance for Maximizing

Success of Storytelling Sessions During a

User-Centered Design Task

2.

Xiaopeng Yang, Wonsup Lee, Younggeun Choi, and Heecheon You, Pohang U. of Science and

Technology, Development of a User-Centered

Virtual Liver Surgery Planning System

3.

Birgit Planitz, Penelope Sanderson, and Clinton

Freeman, Nat. ICT Australia; Tania Xiao, U. of Queensland; Adi Botea and Cristina Beltran

Orihuela, Nat. ICT Australia, Observing the

Challenges of Implementing New Health ICT

4.

Michael Sackllah, Denny Yu, Charles Woolley,

Steven Kasten, and Thomas J. Armstrong, U. of

Michigan, Evaluating Alternate Visualization

Methods for Microsurgery: 2-D and 3-D

Optical Microscopes and Flat-Panel Displays

5.

Dan Nathan-Roberts, U. of Wisconsin-Madison;

Yili Liu, U. of Michigan, Comparison of Design

Preferences for Mobile Phones and Blood

Glucose Meters

6.

Aimee Michelle Peason, Jeff K. Caird, and Andrew

Mayer, U. of Calgary, Crash Cart Drug Drawer

Layout and Design

PP2 – MULTISENSORY TACTILE SYSTEMS

FOR SOLDIERS: THEORY, RESEARCH, AND

APPLICATIONS

Discussion Panel

Tuesday, October 23, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Perception & Performance

Chair: Linda R. Elliott, U.S. Army Research Lab;

Cochair: Peter A. Hancock, U. of Central Florida

Panelists: Elizabeth S. Redden, U.S. Army Research

Lab; Elmar T. Schmeisser, U.S. Army Research Office;

Roger W. Cholewiak, Navy Aeromedical Research Lab;

Angus Rupert and Benton Lawson, Army Aeromedical

Research Lab; Bruce Mortimer, Engineering Acoustics,

Inc.; Jan B.F. van Erp, TNO Human Factors

S1 – MENTAL WORKLOAD, SITUATION

AWARENESS, & TECHNOLOGY

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 1:30-3:00 p.m.

Commonwealth Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Safety

Chair: Jay Pollack, JTG

1.

Catherine Neubauer, Gerald Matthews, and

Dyani Saxby, U. of Cincinnati, The Effects of

Cell Phone Use and Automation on Driver

Performance and Subjective State in Simu lated Driving

2.

Jingyi Zhang and Avinoam Borowsky, U. of Massa chusetts Amherst; Bent Schmidt-Nielsen and

Bret Harsham, Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs;

Garrett Weinberg, Nuance Communications;

Matthew R. E. Romoser and Donald L. Fisher,

U. of Massachusetts Amherst, Evaluation of Two

Types of In-Vehicle Music Retrieval and Navi gation Systems

14 O C TO B E R 2 3 – T U E S D AY

3.

Kazushige Wada and Mayuko Ueda, West Japan

Railway Co., Emotional Responses to Trouble

Events on a Train-Driving Simulator

4.

Kristopher M. Thornburg, Henricus P.M. Peterse, and Andrew M. Liu, Massachusetts Inst. of Tech nology, Operator Performance in Long Dura tion Control Operations: Switching From Low to High Task Load

5.

Bjørn Sætrevik, U. of Bergen, A Controlled

Field Study of Situation Awareness Measures and Heart Rate Variability in Emergency

Handling Teams

ST2 – DRIVER ASSISTANCE SYSTEMS

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Otis (Lobby Level)

Surface Transportation

Chair: Birsen Donmez, U. of Toronto; Cochair: Sylvain

Bruni, Aptima, Inc.

1.

John K. Pollard, Catherine Guthy, Aaron Hastings, and Mary D. Stearns, Volpe National Transporta tion Systems Ctr.; Lisandra Garay-Vega, National

Highway Traffic Safety Admin., Evaluation of

Sounds for Hybrid and Electric Vehicles

Operating at Low Speed

2.

Dev S. Kochhar, Walter J. Talamonti, and Louis

S. Tijerina, Ford Motor Co., Driver Response to Unexpected Automatic Braking/Haptic

Warning While Backing

3.

Nicole J. Hollopeter, Timothy Leo Brown, and

Geb Thomas, U. of Iowa, Differences in Novice and Experienced Driver Response to Lane

Departure Warnings That Provide Active

Intervention

4.

Scott McIntyre, Arizona State U.; Leo Gugerty and Drew Link, Clemson U.; Karl Zimmerman,

Valparaiso U.; Devendra Tolani, Intelligent Auto mation, Inc.; Peter Huang, Federal Highway

Admin.; Robert Pokorny, Intelligent Automation,

Inc., Lane Specific Dilemma Zone Warnings at Signalized Intersections

5.

Michelle Yeh, Federal Aviation Admin.; Thomas

Raslear, Federal Railroad Admin.; Jordan Multer,

Volpe National Transportation Systems Ctr., Eval u ating the Impact of Grade Crossing Safety

Factors Through Signal Detection Theory

O C TO B E R 2 3 – T U E S D AY

TE1 – ANALYSIS, EVALUATION, AND

USABILITY TESTING

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Test & Evaluation; cosponsored by Industrial

Ergonomics

Chair: Thomas Davis, U.S. Army Research Lab;

Cochair: Carole Kortenhaus, U.S. Army Research Lab

1.

Y. H. Huang, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for

Safety; D. Zohar, Technion Inst. of Technology;

M. M. Robertson, A. Garabet, and L. A. Murphy,

Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for Safety;

J. Lee, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for Safety/

U. of Connecticut, Development and Valida tion of Safety Climate Scales for the Utility/

Electric Power Industry

2.

John R. Heberger, National Inst. for Occupational

Safety and Health; Mahiyar F. Nasarwanji and

Victor L. Paquet, U. at Buffalo, SUNY; Jonisha P.

Pollard and Patrick G. Dempsey, National Inst.

for Occupational Safety and Health, Inter-Rater

Reliability of Video-Based Ergonomic Job

Analysis for Maintenance Work in Mineral

Processing and Coal Preparation Plants

3.

Clive D’Souza, Victor Paquet, and Edward

Steinfeld, U. at Buffalo, SUNY, Clearance Space

Envelopes of Wheeled Mobility Device Users for Computer Workstations

4.

Peiyi Ko, Anand Mohapatra, and Ian Bailey, U. of

California, Berkeley; James Sheedy, Pacific U.;

David Rempel, U. of California, Berkeley, Effects of Font Size and Reflective Glare on Text-

Based Task Performance and Postural Change

Behavior of Presbyopic and Nonpresbyopic

Computer Users

5.

Susan G. Campbell and Michael F. Bunting, U. of

Maryland, Usability Testing the Afghan Lan guage Aptitude Battery: Evaluating Cognitive

Tests for Nontraditional Populations

VE1 – ME AND MY VE

Alternative Format

Tuesday, October 23, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Adams (Mezzanine Level)

Virtual Environments

Chair: Laura D. Strater, SA Technologies, Inc.;

Cochair: Alexandra Proaps, Old Dominion U.

Presenters: Michael Clamann and David Kaber, North

Carolina State U.; Dwight Meglan, SimQuest, LLC;

Katelyn Procci, Clint Bowers, and Anya Andrews, U.

of Central Florida; Jonathan Ericson and William H.

Warren, Brown U.; Bimal Balakrishnan and Danielle

Oprean, U. of Missouri; Loukas Kallisteris, Pennsyl vania State U.

15

Tuesday

Oct. 23

Tuesday

Oct. 23

Tuesday, October 23

3:30–5:00 p.m.

CE4 – IMPACT OF RISK, SAFETY, &

ALERTING

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom C/D (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Karen Feigh, Georgia Inst. of Technology

1.

Ananda von der Heyde, Palle Presting, Annette

Kluge, and Björn Badura, U. of Duisburg-Essen,

Social Norms and Their Impact on Safety-

Related Rule Violations in Process Control:

Does It Make a Difference If Operators Are

Aware That Residents Will Be Injured?

2.

Linda Onnasch, Stefan Ruff, and Dietrich

Manzey, Berlin Inst. of Technology, Operators’

Adaption to Unreliability of Alarm Systems:

A Performance and Eye-Tracking Analysis

3.

Rebecca Wiczorek, Berlin Inst. of Technology;

Joachim Meyer, Ben-Gurion U. of the Negev;

Torsten Guenzler, Berlin Inst. of Technology, On the Relation Between Reliance and Compli ance in an Aided Visual Scanning Task

4.

H. Y. Wen and A. W. Johnson, Massachusetts Inst.

of Technology; K. R. Duda, Charles Stark Draper

Lab; C. M. Oman, Massachusetts Inst. of Tech nol ogy; A. Natapoff, Massachusetts Inst. of Tech nology, Decision-Making and Risk-Taking

Behavior in Lunar Landing

5.

Ewart J. de Visser, Frank Krueger, Patrick

McKnight, Steven Scheid, Melissa Smith,

Stephanie Chalk, and Raja Parasuraman, George

Mason U., The World Is Not Enough: Trust in

Cognitive Agents

CE5 – PERSPECTIVES ON SITUATED

COGNITION IN CYBER SECURITY

Discussion Panel

Tuesday, October 23, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom II (Conference Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Nancy J. Cooke, Arizona State U.

Panelists: Michael D. McNeese, Pennsylvania State U.;

Anita D’Amico, Secure Decisions; Mica R. Endsley,

SA Technologies, Inc.; Cleotilde Gonzalez, Carnegie

Mellon U.; Emilie M. Roth, Roth Cognitive Engineer ing; Eduardo Salas, U. of Central Florida

DEM1 – INTERACTIVE DEMONSTRATIONS

Demonstrations

Tuesday, October 23, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom B (Concourse Level)

Demonstations

Chair: Ronald L. Boring, Idaho National Lab

1.

Jean M. R. Costa, Xianjun Sam Zheng, Roberto

S. Silva Filho, and Xiping Song, Siemens, Fast,

Formal, & Beautiful: Effectively Capture,

Document, and Communicate User

Workflow Information for Designing

Complex Healthcare Software Systems

2.

Andrew S. Clare, Jason C. Ryan, Kimberly F.

Jackson, and M. L. Cummings, Massachusetts

Inst. of Technology, Innovative Systems for

Human Supervisory Control of Unmanned

Vehicles

3.

Liza Josias, Jacob A. Miller, Kelley J. Krokos, and

Corinne E. White, American Inst. for Research,

The Transition from Analog to Digital

NOTAMs: A Tool to Support Human Per formance

4.

Jason Nawyn, Massachusetts Inst. of Technology;

Maria Thompson and Nancy Chen, OSRAM

SYLVANIA; Kent L. Larson, Massachusetts Inst.

of Technology, A Closed-Loop Feedback Sys tem for a Context-Aware Tunable Architec tural Lighting Application

FP2 – FACTORS RELATED TO PERCEIVING

THE RELATIVE SPEED OF LEADING VEHI -

CLES IN HIGH-SPEED REAR-END CRASHES

Discussion Panel

Tuesday, October 23, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Webster (Lobby Level)

Forensics Professional

Chair: Michael E. Maddox, Sisyphus Assoc.; Cochair:

Rudolf G. Mortimer, Consultant

Panelists: Gregory M. J. Fitch, Virginia Polytechnic

Inst. and State U.; Aaron Kiefer, Accident Research

Specialists; Rudolf Mortimer, Consultant; Jeffrey

Muttart, U. of Massachusetts Amherst

16 O C TO B E R 2 3 – T U E S D AY

GS3 – CREATING HEALTHCARE SIMULA -

TION TRAINING SYSTEMS: A DESIGNER’S

FORUM

Alternative Format

Tuesday, October 23, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

General Sessions

Chair: Mark W. Scerbo, Old Dominion U.

Panelists: Dwight Meglan, SimQuest, LLC.; Alan Liu,

Uniformed Services U. of the Health Sciences; Steven

Dawson, Massachusetts General Hospital

GS4 – GENERAL SESSIONS LECTURES

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Otis (Lobby Level)

General Sessions

Chair: Frank Lacson, Pacific Science & Engineering

Group

1.

Dan Chiappe, Kim-Phuong L. Vu, Conrad Rorie, and Corey Morgan, California State U., Long

Beach, A Situated Approach to Shared Situa tion Awareness

2.

Ahamed Altaboli and Yingzi Lin, Northeastern U.,

Effects of Unity of Form and Symmetry on

Visual Aesthetics of Website Interface Design

3.

Richard T. Stone, Kristopher P. Watts, and Bryce E.

Rosenquist, Iowa State U., Evaluation of 3-D

Television: Impact on Depth Perception

4.

Tareq Z. Ahram and Waldemar Karwowski, U. of

Central Florida, A Framework for Human

Total Ownership Cost Based on Universal

Human Performance Cost Components

5.

Helen G. L. Gao and Paul W. Fisher, Temple U.;

Christine K. Wade, Thomas Jefferson U.; Ann E.

Barr, Pacific U.; Steven N. Popoff and Mary F.

Barbe, Temple U., Increased Serum TNF-

ALPHA and Matrix Metalloproteinase-2 Are

Associated With Grip Strength Declines and

Tissue Degeneration in a Rat Model of

Overuse

6.

Daniel J. Colombo and Lisa N. Chavez, Basic

Commerce and Industries, Inc.; Sean Driscoll,

Naval Surface Warfare Ctr., A Tailored Top-

Down Function Analysis (TDFA) for Aegis

Ballistic Missile Defense (ABMD)

HC3 – NURSING

Alternative Format

Tuesday, October 23, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: Anne Miller, Vanderbilt U.; Cochair: Enid

Montague, U. of Wisconsin-Madison

1.

Ruth J. Bryan, Massachusetts General Hospital,

Keeping Our Patients Safe While Meeting

Challenges in Nursing I

2.

Fernando M. Green, U. of West Indies; Alvaro D.

Taveira, U. of Wisconsin-Whitewater, The Preva lence of Sleep Deprivation Symptoms Among

Night Shift Nurses and Nurses’ Aides at the

University Hospital of the West Indies

3.

Ashley N. Ferguson, Sadaf Kazi, and Francis T.

Durso, Georgia Inst. of Technology, Revealing

Latent Strategy Structures From Expert Cri tical Care Nurses

4.

Sadaf Kazi, Ashley N. Ferguson, and Francis T.

Durso, Georgia Inst. of Technology, Mapping

Strategies to Threats in Critical Care Nursing

5.

Pascale Carayon, U. of Wisconsin-Madison,

Keeping Our Patients Safe While Meeting

Challenges in Nursing II

Tuesday

Oct. 23

I1/CS – SECURITY, PRIVACY, AND TRUST

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Internet; cosponsored by Computer Systems

Chair: Rochelle Edwards, Electronic Arts, Inc.;

Cochair: Joshua Hurwitz, Motorola Mobility, Inc.

1.

Rochelle Edwards, Electronic Arts, Inc.,

Improvement of a Social Gaming Checkout

User Interface

2.

Andrew J. Wismer, Messiah College; Kapil Chalil

Madathil, Reshmi Koikkara, Kevin A. Juang, and

Joel S. Greenstein, Clemson U., Evaluating the

Usability of Captchas on a Mobile Device

With Voice and Touch Input

3.

Teun Lucassen, U. of Twente; Jan Maarten

Schraagen, TNO, The Role of Topic Familiar ity in Online Credibility Evaluation Support

4.

Joshua B. Hurwitz, Motorola Mobility, Inc.,

Acceptance of Advertising and Collection of

Personal Information

5.

Steffen Werner and Connor Hoover, U. of Idaho,

Cognitive Approaches to Password Memora bility—The Possible Role of Story-Based

Passwords

O C TO B E R 2 3 – T U E S D AY 17

Tuesday

Oct. 23

POS1 - POSTERS 1

Poster Session

Tuesday, October 23, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Galleria Exhibit Hall (Galleria Level)

Posters

Poster sessions are 90 minutes only; presenters are required to be present throughout the session.

Communications

1.

Rochelle Edwards, Electronic Arts, Inc.; Philip

Kortum, Rice U., He Says, She Says: Does

Voice Affect Usability?

2.

Daniel Hor, Igor Dolgov, and Amanda Fretwell,

New Mexico State U., Being Aware That

You’re Nice or Nasty Won’t Make You Write

Friendlier E-Mail

Computer Systems

3.

Mikki H. Phan and Jo R. Jardina, Wichita State

U.; Sloane Hoyle, U. of Houston-Clear Lake;

Barbara S. Chaparro, Wichita State U., Examining the Role of Gender in Video Game Usage,

Preference, and Behavior

4.

Marc L. Resnick, Bentley U., Development of an Electronic Patient Record Selection

Instrument

5.

Justin W. Owens, Jennifer Teves, Bobby Nguyen,

Amanda Smith, Mandy C. Phelps, and Barbara S.

Chaparro, Wichita State U., Examination of

Dual vs. Single Monitor Use During Common

Office Tasks

6.

Bobby Tran Nguyen and Barbara S. Chaparro,

Wichita State U., Apple iPad Usage Trends by

Students and Nonstudents

Environmental Design

7.

Simon Hodder and Ken Parsons, Loughborough

U., A New International Standard for the

Design of an Environmental Survey for the

Assessment of Integrated Environments

8.

Nicholas Kelling, U. of South Florida; Diann

Gaalema, U. of Vermont; Angela Kelling, U. of

South Florida, Elephant in the Break Room:

The Use of Modified Operational Sequence

Diagrams for the Determination of Zoo

Exhibit Inefficiencies

General Sessions

9.

Gayle Hunt, Stephen Rice, Kasha Geels, and

Doug Davis, New Mexico State U., Using

Magpie Research to Determine the Top 10

Human Factors Issues in UAS for NATO

FINAS

10. Curtis Craig and Martina Inge Klein, Texas Tech

U., Mental Demand, Asymmetries, and

Tympanic Membrane Temperature (TMT)

Individual Differences in Performance

11. Heather C. Lum, Penn State Erie, The Behrend

College; Valerie K. Sims and Matthew G. Chin,

U. of Central Florida; Shane E. Halse and Megan

A. Harris, Penn State Erie, The Behrend College,

Humans to Robots: How Technomorphic

Features Shape Our Perceptions of Each

Other

12. Andre Garcia, George Mason U.; Victor Finomore,

Jr., and Gregory Burnett, U.S. Air Force Research

Lab; Carryl Baldwin, George Mason U.;

Christopher Brill, Old Dominion U., Individual

Differences in Multimodal Waypoint

Navigation

13. Tarah Nicole Schmidt, Grace W. L. Teo, James L.

Szalma, Gabriella M. Hancock, and Peter A.

Hancock, U. of Central Florida, The Effect of

Video Game Play on Performance in a

Vigilance Task

14. Kristin E. Schaefer, Tracy L. Sanders, Ryan E.

Yordon, Deborah R. Billings, and Peter A.

Hancock, U. of Central Florida, Classification of Robot Form: Factors Predicting Perceived

Trustworthiness

System Development

15. Elizabeth K. Phillips, Scott Ososky, Brittany

Swigert, and Florian Jentsch, U. of Central Florida,

Human-Animal Teams as an Analog for

Future Human-Robot Teams

Test & Evaluation

16. J. Lee, U. of Connecticut; Y. H. Huang, L. A.

Murphy, S. Jeffries, M. M. Robertson, and

A. Garabet, Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for

Safety, Measurement Equivalence of Trucking

Industry-Specific Safety Climate Scales

17. L. A. Murphy and Y. H. Huang, Liberty Mutual

Research Inst. for Safety; J. Lee, U. of Connecti cut; S. Jeffries, M. M. Robertson, and A. Garabet,

Liberty Mutual Research Inst. for Safety, The

Influence of Organizational Structure on

Safety Climate in the Trucking Industry

Training

18. Per-Anders Oskarsson and Staffan Nählinder,

Swedish Defence Research Agency, Training

Effects in a Low-Fidelity Combat Vehicle

Simulator

19. Javier Rivera, Michael T. Curtis, Florian Jentsch, and Jose Quevedo, U. of Central Florida, Assess ing the Impact of a Dynamic Intervention

Within a Perceptual Discrimination Training

Module

18 O C TO B E R 2 3 – T U E S D AY

20. Cheryl I. Johnson, Heather A. Priest-Walker, and

Paula J. Durlach, U.S. Army Research Inst.;

Stephen R. Serge, U. of Central Florida,

The Effect of Feedback Specificity in a

Virtual Training Environment

21. Adam J. Strang, Consortium Research Fellows

Program; Gregory J. Funke, Benjamin A. Knott,

Scott M. Galster, and Sheldon M. Russell, U.S.

Air Force Research Lab, Effects of Cross-

Training on Team Performance, Communi cation, and Workload in Simulated Air Battle

Management

22. Grace W. Teo, James L. Szalma, Tarah N. Schmidt,

Gabriella M. Hancock, and Peter A. Hancock, U.

of Central Florida, Evaluating Vigilance in a

Dynamic Environment: Methodological

Issues and Proposals

University Lab Posters

23. Arizona State U., Cognitive Science &

Engineering Labs

24. Pennsylvania State U., Multidisciplinary

Initiatives in Naturalistic Decision Systems

(MINDS) Lab

25. U. of Washington, Human Factors and

Statistical Modeling Lab and Ergonomics Lab

26. Michigan Technological U., Applied Cognition and Expertise (ACE), Cognitive Modeling and

Experimentation (CME), Decision Science &

Decision Engineering (DeSciDE), Mind, Music,

& Machine Lab, Occupational Safety & Health

(OSH)

27. Mississippi State U., Human Systems

Engineering Lab (HSEL)

28. Old Dominion U., Human Factors Labs

PD2 – 11TH ANNUAL USER-CENTERED

PRODUCT DESIGN AWARD SESSION

Alternative Format

Tuesday, October 23, 3:30-5:00 p.m.

Stone (Lobby Level)

Product Design

Chair: Stanley Caplan, Usability Assoc.; Cochair:

Dianne McMullin, Boeing Co.

PP3 – OPERATING SYSTEMS IN SIMULATED,

VIRTUAL, & FARAWAY ENVIRONMENTS

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Perception & Performance

Chair: Brian Dyre, U. of Idaho; Cochair: Thomas

Fincannon, U. of Central Florida

1.

Keith S. Jones, Elizabeth A. Schmidlin, and Noah

J. Wheeler, Texas Tech U., Can Users Judge the Stair-Climbing Abilities of Two-Wheeled

Self-Balancing Robots?

2.

Huiyang Li and Nadine B. Sarter, U. of Michi gan; Angelia Sebok and Christopher D. Wickens,

Alion Science and Technology, The Design and

Evaluation of Visual and Tactile Warnings in

Support of Space Teleoperation

3.

Stephen R. Ellis and Bernard D. Adelstein, NASA

Ames Research Ctr.; Kiwon Yeom, San Jose State

U., Human Control in Rotated Frames: Ani sotropies in the Misalignment Disturbance

Function of Pitch, Roll, and Yaw

4.

Steven Cloete, Christine Zupanc, Robin Burgess-

Limerick, and Guy Wallis, U. of Queensland,

Steering Performance and Dynamic Complex ity in a Simulated Underground Mining

Vehicle

5.

Noah J. Wheeler, Martina I. Klein, and Curtis

Craig, Texas Tech U., Camera Placement in

Simulated Laparoscopic Surgery Influences

Performance

Tuesday

Oct. 23

S2 – ACCIDENT ANALYSIS, RISK ASSESS -

MENT, & HUMAN RELIABILITY

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Commonwealth Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Safety

Chair: Katherine A. Berry, Fort Hill Group, LLC

1.

Colin G. Drury, Applied Ergonomics Groups Inc.;

William L. Porter and Partick G. Dempsey,

National Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health,

Patterns in Mining Haul Truck Accidents

2.

Kristian S. Gould and Arne J. Ringstad, Statoil

ASA; Koen van de Merwe, Det Norske Veritas

AS, Human Reliability Analysis in Major

Accident Risk Analyses in the Norwegian

Petroleum Industry

3.

Koen van de Merwe and Sondre Øie, Det Norske

Veritas; Kristian Gould, Statoil, The Application of the SPAR-H Method in Managed-Pressure

Drilling Operations

O C TO B E R 2 3 – T U E S D AY 19

4.

Ronald Laurids Boring and David Ira Gertman,

Idaho National Lab, Human Reliability Analy sis for Computerized Procedures, Part Two:

Applicability of Current Methods

5.

Katya L. Le Blanc and Johanna H. Oxstrand,

Idaho National Lab, A Model of Operator Interaction With Field Procedures: Insights for

Computer-Based Procedures

Wednesday

Oct. 24

SF2 – BIOMECHANICS, ERGONOMICS, AND

HAPTICS

Lecture

Tuesday, October 23, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Douglas (Mezzanine Level)

Student Forum

Chair: Brian T. Lin, U. of Michigan; Cochair: Andre

Garcia, George Mason U.

1.

Jeffrey C. Parr and Michael E. Miller, U.S. Air

Force Inst. of Technology; Nathaniel R. Bridges,

John R. Buhrman, Chris E. Perry, and Nathan L.

Wright, U.S. Air Force Research Lab, Evalua tion of the Nij Neck Injury Criteria With Human

Response Data for Use in Future Research on Helmet-Mounted Dis play Mass Properties

2.

Trey Roady and Thomas K. Ferris, Texas A&M U.,

An Analysis of Static, Dynamic, and Saltatory

Vibrotactile Stimuli to Inform the Design of

Efficient Haptic Communication Systems

3.

Denny Yu, Adam Frischknecht, Cooper Green,

Steven Kasten, and Thomas J. Armstrong, U. of

Michigan, Assessing Posture in Surgery:

Video Sampling of Microsurgery

4.

Landon Drew LaPorte, Anne Collins McLaughlin,

Laura A. Whitlock, Maribeth Gandy, and Amanda

K. Trujillo, North Carolina State U., Motor Skill

Acquisition in a Virtual World by Older

Adults: Relationships Between Age, Physical

Activity, and Performance

Tuesday, October 23

5:00–6:00 p.m.

Technical Group Networking/

Business Meetings

Product Design

5:00-5:30 p.m.

Stone (Lobby Level)

System Development

5:00–6:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

20

Wednesday, October 24

7:30–8:30 a.m.

Technical Group Networking/

Business Meeting

Education

7:30–8:30 a.m. (breakfast; reserve at HFES Central)

Lewis (Conference Level)

Wednesday, October 24

8:30–10:00 a.m.

AS2 – HUMAN-TECHNOLOGY

INTERACTION IN AVIATION SYSTEMS

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Harbor Ballroom II (Conference Level)

Aerospace Systems

Chair: Valerie J. Gawron, MITRE Corp.; Cochair: Kara

Latorella, NASA Langley Research Ctr.

1.

Amy R. Pritchett, Elizabeth S. Fleming, William P.

Cleveland, Vlad M. Popescu, and Dhruv A.

Thakkar, Georgia Inst. of Technology; Jonathan J.

Zoetrum, TU Delft, Pilot’s Information Use

During TCAS Events, and Relationship to

Compliance to TCAS Resolution Advisories

2.

Tracy Lennertz, Judith Burki-Cohen, and Andrea

L. Sparko, Volpe National Transportation Systems

Ctr.; Nickolas Macchiarella, Jason Kring, Mike

Coman, Tom Haritos, and Jeffry Alvarado, Embry-

Riddle Aeronautical U., NextGen Flight Deck

Data Comm: Auxiliary Synthetic Speech—

Phase I

3.

James Stephen Higgins, Applied Research

Assoc., Inc.; Ben Willems, Daniel R. Johnson, and Carolina M. Zingale, Federal Aviation Admin.,

A Human Factors and Electromyographic

Evaluation of Proposed Pointing Devices for

Air Traffic Controllers

4.

Lisa Fern and Caitlin A. Kenny, San Jose State U.;

Robert J. Shively, U.S. Army Aviation and Missile

Research Development and Engineering Ctr.;

Walter Johnson, NASA Ames Research Ctr.,

UAS Integration Into the NAS: An Examina tion of Baseline Compliance in the Current

Airspace System

5.

Stephen D. O’Connell and Martin Castor, Swedish

Defence Research Agency; Jerry Pousette, Milso

AB; Martin Krantz, SmartEye AB, Eye Tracking-

Based Target Designation in Simulated Close-

Range Air Combat

O C TO B E R 2 4 – W E D N E S D AY

CE6 – APPROACHES TO COGNITIVE BIAS IN

SERIOUS GAMES FOR CRITICAL THINKING

Discussion Panel

Wednesday, October 24, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Robert R. Hoffman, Inst. for Human & Machine

Cognition

Panelists: John M. Flach, Wright State U.; Christopher

R. Hale, Richard Catrambone, and Elizabeth T.

Whitaker, Georgia Inst. of Technology; Gary Klein,

Macrocognition, LLC; Beth Veinott, Cognitive

Solutions Division of ARA, Inc.

CS1/I – USER EXPERIENCE DAY KEYNOTE—

THE HUMAN FACTORS OF “SIMPLE”

DEVICES

Invited Address

Wednesday, October 24, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Computer Systems; cosponsored by Internet

Chair: Kenneth Ohnemus, Red Moon Interactive

Invited Speaker: Bill Buxton, Microsoft Research

FP3 – EXAMPLES OF HOW TO PRESENT

HUMAN FACTORS TESTIMONY TO THE

TRIER OF FACT

Alternative Format

Wednesday, October 24, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Webster (Lobby Level)

Forensics Professional

Chair: Gary D. Sloan, G. David Sloan, Inc.; Cochair:

Joseph Cohen, Error Analysis, Inc.

Panelists: Kenneth E. Nemire, HFE Consulting, Inc.;

Joseph Cohen, Error Analysis, Inc.; Marc L. Resnick,

Bentley U.; Claudine Cloutier, Keches Law Group, P.C.

GS5 – HUMAN FACTORS PRIZE SESSION

Alternative Format

Wednesday, October 24, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Grand Ballroom C/D (Concourse Level)

General Sessions

Chair: Nancy J. Cooke, Arizona State U.; Cochair:

William S. Marras, Ohio State U.

Hongwei Hsiao, National Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Anthropometric Procedures for Pro tective Equipment Sizing and Design

HC4 – CONTEXT

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: F. Jacob Seagull, U. of Michigan; Cochair:

Priyadarshini Pennathur, Johns Hopkins U.

1.

Renaldo C. Blocker, Cedars-Sinai Medical Ctr.;

Sacha Duff and Douglas Wiegmann, U. of

Wisconsin-Madison; Ken Catchpole, Jennifer

Blaha, Daniel Shouhed, Eric Ley, Cathy Karl,

Richard Karl, and Bruce Gewertz, Cedars-Sinai

Medical Ctr., Flow Disruptions in Trauma

Surgery: Type, Impact, and Affect

2.

Dean Hooper and Kristin Simoens, Ximedica,

The “Smart Bay” Optimizing Trauma Care of the Future

3.

Nicole E. Werner, Erik Nelson, William D. Miller, and Deborah A. Boehm-Davis, George Mason U.,

Interruptions in the Real World: Examining the Role of Internal Versus External Inter ruptions in a Hospital Pharmacy

4.

Farzan Sasangohar, Birsen Donmez, Patricia

Trbovich, and Anthony C. Easty, U. of Toronto,

Not All Interruptions Are Created Equal:

Positive Interruptions in Healthcare

5.

Vicki R. Lewis and Sarah Henrickson Parker,

MedStar Inst. for Innovation; Robert J. Stephens,

Wiklund Research and Design; Lindsey Clark and

Rollin J. Fairbanks, MedStar Inst. for Innova tion,

Why Aren’t We Achieving Better Results? A

Literature Review of Healthcare-Associated

Infection Interventions

Wednesday

Oct. 24

HP1 – EVALUATING MODELS OF HUMAN

PERFORMANCE

Discussion Panel

Wednesday, October 24, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Human Performance Modeling

Chair: Steven J. Landry, Purdue U.; Cochair: Matthew

Bolton, U. of Illinois-Chicago

Panelists: Thomas B. Sheridan, Massachusetts Inst. of

Technology; Richard Pew, BBN; Wayne Gray, Rens selaer Polytechnic Inst.; Dario Salvucci, Drexel U.

O C TO B E R 2 4 – W E D N E S D AY 21

Wednesday

Oct. 24

ID2 – INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN

HUMAN INTERACTION WITH

AUTOMATION, ROBOTS, AND COMPUTERS

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Douglas (Mezzanine Level)

Individual Differences

Chair: Meike Jipp, German Aerospace Ctr.; Cochair:

Gabriella Hancock, U. of Central Florida

1.

Brittany Christine Sellers, Thomas Fincannon, and Florian Jentsch, U. of Central Florida, The

Effects of Autonomy and Cognitive Abilities on Workload and Supervisory Control of

Unmanned Systems

2.

Vlad Pop, Alex Shrewsbury, and Francis T. Durso,

Georgia Inst. of Technology, Propensity to Trust

Influences Operator Calibration of Automa tion Reliability

3.

Sharon Berlin, AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety;

Ian J. Reagan, National Highway Traffic Safety

Admin.; James P. Bliss, Old Dominion U., Parti cipant Characteristics and Speeding Behavior

During an Advisory Warning and Cash In centive Intervention

4.

Yueqing Li, Jincheol Woo, and Chang S. Nam,

North Carolina State U., A Preliminary Re search on P300-Based BCI Application for

People With Motor Disabilities

POS2 – POSTERS 2

Poster Session

Wednesday, October 24, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Galleria Exhibit Hall (Galleria Level)

Posters

Poster sessions are 90 minutes only; presenters are required to be present throughout the session.

Industrial Ergonomics

1.

Mark G. Blanchette and Christopher M. Powers,

U. of Southern California, The Influence of

Footwear Tread Groove Parameters on

Available Friction

2.

Harry Nguyen, U. of Houston-Clear Lake;

Michael C. Bartha, Hewlett-Packard, Shape

Writing on Tablets: Better Performance or

Better Experience?

3.

Paul Ritchey, S. Camille Peres, and Timothy John

Duffield, U. of Houston-Clear Lake, Differences in Muscle Activity for Four Touch Devices

Internet

4.

Philip Kortum, Rice U.; Lauren F. V. Scharff, U.S.

Air Force Academy, Where’s My Web Page?

How Aesthetic Changes Affect User Per for mance When Critical Navigation Links

Change

22

5.

Jo R. Jardina, Mikki Phan, Duy Nguyen, and

Barbara S. Chaparro, Wichita State U., Gender

Differences in First Impressions of Web Pages:

The Role of Attractiveness, Complexity, and

Brightness on Perceived Design Quality

6.

Ga-Won Kim, Seoul National U.; Jihyoun Lim,

Hongik U.; Hyosun Choi and Myung-Hwan Yun,

Seoul National U., Adopting Network Analysis

Methods for Contextual Inquiry: The Keyword

Structure Representation of a Web Behavior

7.

Timothy Frischmann and Tripp Driskell, U. of

Central Florida, Using Social Media for Evalu ating HCI Systems: An Illustrative Example

8.

Samantha D. Jansen, Andrew Miranda, and Justin

Owens, Wichita State U.; Brian J. Zikmund-Fisher,

U. of Michigan; Victoria Shaffer, U. of Missouri,

The Effect of Text Versus Video Presenta tions of Patient Narratives in a Web-Based

Patient Decision Aid

9.

Duy Tri Nguyen, Justin Owens, Alex Chaparro,

Barbara Chaparro, and Evan Palmer, Wichita State

U., Gaze Pattern Differences Between Objec tive and Subjective Search of e-Commerce

Web Pages

Perception & Performance

10. Joshua Sandry, Jeremy Schwark, Gayle Hunt,

Kasha Geels, and Stephen Rice, New Mexico

State U., Superior Visual Search Accuracy

After Exposure to Natural Relative to Urban

Environments

11. Joseph Szczerba, Roger Hersberger, and Alex

Riegelman, General Motors Co., Design and

Evaluation of a Differential Speedometer

12. Samuel J. Levulis and Patricia R. DeLucia, Texas

Tech U.; Daniel Oberfeld, U. of Mainz, Effects of Task-Irrelevant Cars on Judgments of

Deceleration and Time-to-Contact During

Car-Following

13. Anne M. Sinatra, Valerie K. Sims, Maxine B. Najle, and Shannon K.T. Bailey, U. of Central Florida,

The Impact of Synthetic and Accented

Speech on Unattended Recall in a Dichotic

Listening Task

14. Frédéric Dehais, Mickael Causse, Nicolas Régis,

Eric Menant, and Patrice Labedan, Inst. Supérieur de l’Aéronautique et de l’Espace; François Vachon and Sébastien Tremblay, U. Laval, Missing Criti cal Auditory Alarms in Aeronautics: Evidence for Inattentional Deafness?

15. Yael Salzer and Tal Oron-Gilad, Ben Gurion U. of the Negev, A Comparison of “On-Thigh”

Vibro tactile, Combined Visual-Vibrotactile, and Visual-Only Alerting Systems for the

Cock pit Under Visually Demanding Condi tions

O C TO B E R 2 4 – W E D N E S D AY

16. Courtney Castle, Oak Ridge Inst. for Science and

Education; Victor S. Finomore and Brian Simpson,

U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Kelly Satterfield,

Oak Ridge Inst. for Science and Education; Susan

Davis, U. of Dayton, Evaluation of Spatial

Audio for Improving Change Detection on

Large-Screen Displays

17. Michael P. Lee, C. Melody Carswell, Will T.

Seidelman, and Michelle Sublette, U. of Kentuc ky,

The Design of Product Comparison Tables and Its Effects on Decision Making

18. Navaneethan Siva, Alex Chaparro, and Evan

Palmer, Wichita State U., Human Factors Prin ciples Underlying Glyph Design: A Review of the Literature and an Agenda for Future

Research

19. Will Seidelman, C. Melody Carswell, Russell C.

Grant, Michelle Sublette, Cindy H. Lio, and Brent

Seales, U. of Kentucky, Interval Production as a Secondary Task Workload Measure: Con sideration of Primary Task Demands for

Interval Selection

20. Ashley Ann Stafford, Stephanie A. Whetsel,

Natalee K. Cartee, and Richard A. Tyrrell,

Clemson U., How Accurate Are Older Drivers’

Judgments of the Effects of Headlight Glare on Acuity?

21. Adrian Garcia and S. Camille Peres, U. of Houston-

Clear Lake, Auditory Progress Bars: The

Effects of Feedback, Endpoint, and Free

Response on Estimations of Time Remaining

Surface Transportation

22. Kasha Blair, Joshua Sandry, and Stephen Rice, New

Mexico State U., An Expansion of System Wide

Trust Theory Using In-Vehicle Automation

23. Christian Gonzalez, Bridget A. Lewis, Daniel M.

Roberts, Stephanie M. Pratt, and Carryl L.

Baldwin, George Mason U., Perceived Urgency and Annoyance of Auditory Alerts in a Driv ing Context

24. Erin E. Dagnall, Bryan J. Katz, and Mary Anne

Bertola, Science Applications International Corp.,

Electric Vehicle Charging Station Signs: An

Evaluation of Driver Comprehension and

Perceived Risk

25. Joseph M. Crandall and Alex Chaparro, Wichita

State U., Driver Distraction: Effects of Text

Entry Methods on Driving Performance

26. Rowdy James Hope, Roger Lew, Katrina Angelina

Colby, and Brian P. Dyre, U. of Idaho, Optically

Controlled Braking Responses to Variable

Deceleration Magnitudes in a Car-Following

Task

University Lab Posters

27. George Mason U., The Arch Lab

28. North Carolina State U., Research in Ergo nomics and Design

29. Vanderbilt U., Center for Research and

Innovation in Systems Safety (CRISS)

30. Montana State U., Driving Simulator Lab and

Murdock Naturalistic Driving Fleet & Lab

31. U. of Toronto, Human Factors Labs

T1 – LEARNING, FEEDBACK, AND DECISION

MAKING

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Stone (Lobby Level)

Training

Chair: Marianne Paulsen, U.S. Navy/NAWCTSD;

Cochair: Emily Wiese, Aptima, Inc.

1.

Megan Hardy, Joseph Grafsgaard, Eric Wiebe,

Kristy Boyer, and James Lester, North Carolina

State U., Integrating Affective Computing and

Adaptive Training: An Exploratory Analysis to Link Postural Data and Learner Engage ment to Knowledge Acquisition

2.

Mark W. Wiggins, Danielle Azar, and Thomas

Loveday, Macquarie U., The Relationship

Between Preflight Decision-Making and Cue

Utilization

3.

Carla R. Landsberg, Naval Air Warfare Ctr.

Training Systems Division; Alyssa D. Mercado,

KAEGAN Corp.; Wendi L. Van Buskirk, Matthew

Lineberry and Natalie Steinhauser, Naval Air

Warfare Ctr. Training Systems Division, Evalua tion of an Adaptive Training System for Sub marine Periscope Operations

4.

Christopher M. Kelley and Anne Collins

McLaughlin, North Carolina State U., Differ ences in Feedback Use for Correct and

Incorrect Responses

5.

Megan L. Dove-Steinkamp and Robert A.

Henning, U. of Connecticut, Training Under

Imposed Communication Delays Benefits

Performance Effectiveness of Distributed

Teams

Wednesday

Oct. 24

O C TO B E R 2 4 – W E D N E S D AY 23

Wednesday

Oct. 24

TE2 – EVALUATING DESIGN EFFICACY

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Test & Evaluation; cosponsored by Industrial

Ergonomics

Chair: Joshua Rubinstein, ARL HRED; Cochair:

Belinda Lutas-Spencer, ARL HRED

1.

Kurt E. Beschorner and Gurjeet Singh, U. of

Wisconsin-Milwaukee, A Novel Method for

Evaluating the Effectiveness of Shoe-Tread

Designs Relevant to Slip-and-Fall Accidents

2.

Chris Ste-Croix and Dave Tack, HumanSystems

Inc.; Denis Boucher and Francois Ruel, M2M

Lab Inc.; Gilles Pageau, Defence Research and

Development Canada; Stephane Bedard, B-Temia

Inc., Experimental Evaluation of the Dermo skeleton Concept: Addressing the Soldier’s

Overload Challenge

3.

Roger J. Chapman, Collaborative Work Systems

(CWS), Inc.; Dawn L. Riddle, Organizational

Systems Design (OSDi), Inc.; Jordan E. Puryear,

Jared R. Breeden, Anthony Ramirez, and Daniel

S. Hall, U.S. Military Academy, The Design and

Evaluation of THATO: A Mobile Tactile

Messaging System to Assist Dismounted

Soldier Tactical Operations

4.

Stas Simon Krupenia, Scania CV AB; Mathilde

Cuizinaud, Ecole Nationale Supérieure en

Cognitique; Tijmen Muller and Anja H. van der

Hulst, TNO, Identifying Battlefield Informa tion Collection Strategies to Support “Every

Soldier Is a Sensor” Training

5.

Richard Kelly Steinberg and Mark Thornton,

Northrop Grumman Corp., Engineering the User

Into the Design of the Missile Defense Systems

VE2 – APPLICATIONS IN GAMING,

TRAINING, AND DECISION MAKING

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Otis (Lobby Level)

Virtual Environments

Chair: Jennifer Riley, SA Technologies, Inc.; Cochair:

Heather C. Lum, Pennsylvania State U.

1.

Jung Hyup Kim, Gretchen A. Macht, and Shuo Li,

Pennsylvania State U., Comparison of Indi vi dual and Team-Based Dynamic Decision-Making

Task (Anti-Air Warfare Coordinator): Consi deration of Subjective Mental Workload and

Metacognition

2.

Shan Lakhmani, U. of Central Florida; Elaine M.

Raybourn, Sandia Nat. Labs; Alicia Sanchez,

Defense Acquisition U., The Effect of Realistic

24 and Fantastical Narrative Context on Per ceived Relevance and Self-Efficacy in Serious

Games

3.

Alexandra Proaps and James Bliss, Old Dominion

U., Influence of Rapid Serial Visual Presenta tion on Search Task Performance in a Com puter Game

4.

Matthew R. E. Romoser, U. of Massachusetts

Amherst; Pierro Hirsch, Virage Simulation Inc.,

From Lab to Real Life: A Case Study in the

Deployment of Advanced Driving Simulator-

Based Training Systems

5.

Elease J. McLaurin and Richard T. Stone, Iowa

State U., Comparison of Virtual Reality Train ing vs. Integrated Training in the Development of Physical Skills

Wednesday, October 24

10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

A2 – WORKING, DRIVING, SERVING, AND AT

HOME: OLDER ADULTS ARE EVERYWHERE!

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Stone (Lobby Level)

Aging

Chair: Anne Collins McLaughlin, North Carolina

State U.

1.

Cheryl Olga Haslam, Roger Haslam, Stacy Clemes,

Aadil Kazi, Myanna Duncan, Ricardo Twumasi, and Lois Kerr, Loughborough U., Working Late:

Strategies to Enhance Productive and Healthy

Environments for the Older Workforce

2.

John G. Gaspar, U. of Illinois Urbana-Champaign;

Mark B. Neider, U. of Central Florida; Daniel J.

Simons, U. of Illinois Urbana-Champaign; Jason S.

McCarley, Flinders U.; Arthur F. Kramer, U. of

Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Examining the Effi cacy of Training Interventions in Improv ing

Older Driver Performance

3.

Gary L. Boykin, Valerie J. Rice, and Petra E.

Alfred, U.S. Army Research Lab, Age-Related

Balance Among Soldiers

4.

Cory-Ann Smarr, Akanksha Prakash, Jenay M.

Beer, Tracy L. Mitzner, Charles C. Kemp, and

Wendy A. Rogers, Georgia Inst. of Technology,

Older Adults’ Preferences for and Acceptance of Robot Assistance for Everyday Living

Tasks

5.

Davis Conley, Stephanie Tuttle, Nicholas D.

Cassavaugh, and Richard W. Backs, Central Michi gan U., Validation of Inhibition Tasks for a

Comprehensive Assessment of Visual Atten tion Across Age Groups

O C TO B E R 2 4 – W E D N E S D AY

CE7 – INVESTIGATING ASSESSMENTS AND

DECISIONS

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Noelle Brunelle, Sikorsky Aircraft

1.

Jan Willem Streefkerk, Wouter Vos, and Nanja

Smets, TNO, Evaluating a Multimodal Inter face for Firefighting Rescue Tasks

2.

Emily S. Patterson, Fernando Bernal, and Robert

Stephens, Ohio State U., Differences in Macro cognition Strategies With Face-to-Face and

Distributed Teams

3.

B.L. William Wong, Middlesex U.; Margaret Varga,

U. of Oxford, Black Holes, Keyholes, and

Brown Worms: Challenges in Sense Making

4.

Steven J. Landry and Hyo-Sang Yoo, Purdue U.,

Sampling Error and Other Statistical Prob lems With Query-Based Situation Awareness

Measures

5.

Joel Suss and Paul Ward, Michigan Technological

U., Use of an Option Generation Paradigm to Investigate Situation Assessment and

Response Selection in Law Enforcement

CS2/I – USER EXPERIENCE DAY: USER

EXPERIENCE AND AGILE DEVELOPMENT

Discussion Panel

Wednesday, October 24, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Computer Systems; cosponsored by Internet

Chair: Marc L. Resnick, Bentley U.

Panelists: Russ Beebe, Vanderbilt U.; John F. Kelley,

IBM; Jay Elkerton, Emerson Process Management;

Ania Rodriguez, Keylime Interactive

E2 – PAUL M. FITTS EDUCATION AWARD

WINNERS: TEACHING HUMAN FACTORS

AND ERGONOMICS

Discussion Panel

Wednesday, October 24, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Commonwealth A (Concourse Level)

Education

Chair: Elizabeth Blickensderfer, Embry-Riddle

Aeronautical U.

Panelists: Deborah A Boehm-Davis, George Mason

U.; Peter Hancock, U. of Central Florida; Raja

Parasuraman, George Mason U.; Wendy A. Rogers,

Georgia Inst. of Technology; Michael J. Smith, U. of

Wisconsin-Madison

ED2 – ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Douglas (Mezzanine Level)

Environmental Design

Chair: Karen Jacobs, Boston U.

1.

Jeremy M. Spaulding, OSRAM SYLVANIA,

Evaluation of Desirability Assessment Tech niques for Tunable Solid State Lighting

Applications

2.

Nancy A. Baker and Krissy Moehling, U. of Pitts burgh, The Moderating Effect of the Severity of

Baseline Musculoskeletal Discomfort on the

Effect of an Alternative Keyboard: A 5-Month

Randomized Clinical Trial

3.

Gourab Kar, National Inst. of Design; Abir Mullick,

Georgia Inst. of Technology, Designing With

Users: A Case Study for Design of Dental

Workspace

4.

Piyush Bareria, Clive D’Souza, James Lenker,

Victor Paquet, and Edward Steinfeld, U. at Buffalo,

SUNY, Performance of Visually Impaired

Users During Simulated Boarding and

Alighting on Low-Floor Buses

5.

Peter Hutton Taylor-Brown and Daniel Hannon,

Tufts U., An Exploration into Framing Effects and User Preferences: Implications for the

Design of Energy Feedback Interfaces

Wednesday

Oct. 24

GS6 – PROBLEMS IN APPLYING ENGINEER -

ING ANTHROPOMETRY

Discussion Panel

Wednesday, October 24, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

General Sessions

Chair: Alan Poston, HFES Human Factors Standardi za tion Interest Group

Panelists: Thomas Albin, High Plains Engineering

Services; Bruce Bradtmiller, Anthrotech, Inc.; Claire

Gordon, Natick Soldier Research, Engineering and

Development Command; Matt Reed, U. of Michigan

O C TO B E R 2 4 – W E D N E S D AY 25

Wednesday

Oct. 24

HC5 – DEVELOPING METHODS TO MEA SURE

HEALTH CARE TEAM PERFORMANCE IN

ACUTE AND CHRONIC CARE SETTINGS

Invited Symposium

Wednesday, October 24, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: Sarah Henrickson Parker, MedStar Inst. for

Innovation

1.

Sarah Henrickson Parker, MedStar Inst. for Inno vation, Michael Rosen, Johns Hopkins U., Devel oping Methods to Measure Healthcare Team

Performance in Acute and Chronic Care

Settings

2.

Steven Yule, Harvard Medical School, Assessing

Intraoperative Teamwork Skills at the Indi vi dual Level: From Research to Implementation

3.

Tom Reader, London School of Economics;

Rhona Flin, U. of Aberdeen; Brian Cuthbertson,

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Ctr., Assessing

Team Leadership Skills During the ICU

Round

4.

Tanja Manser, U. of Fribourg; Lucy Mitchell, U.

of Aberdeen, Strengths and Weaknesses of

Specific Interview Methods and Qualitative

Data Analysis Strategies in Identifying Team

Performance Requirements

5.

Randall S. Burd, Childrens National Medical Ctr.;

Sarah Henrickson Parker, MedStar Inst. for Inno vation, Using Video Review for Assessment and Improvement of Team Performance in a Dynamic Medical Domain

IE2 – UNDERLYING FACTORS OF MUSCULO -

SKELETAL DISORDERS: WHAT ARE WE

MISSING?

Discussion Panel

Wednesday, October 24, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Harbor Ballroom II (Conference Level)

Industrial Ergonomics

Chair: Kermit Davis, U of Cincinnati; Cochair: Jack

Dennerlein, Northeastern U.

Panelists: William S. Marras, Ohio State U.; Beth

Winkelstein, U. of Pennsylvania; Laura Punnett, U. of Massachusetts-Lowell; Birgitte Blatter, TNO-VU

U. Medical Ctr.

PD3 – HARDWARE DESIGN FOR INTER -

ACTION

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Otis (Lobby Level)

Product Design

Chair: Ravindra Goonetilleke, Hong Kong U. of

Science and Technology; Cochair: Dan Odell, Nokia

1.

Anna Pereira, David L. Lee, Harini Sadeeshkumar, and Charles Laroche, U. of California, Berkeley;

Dan Odell, Nokia; David Rempel, U. of California,

Berkeley, The Effect of Keyboard Key Spacing on Productivity, Usability, and Biomechanics in Touch Typists With Large Hands

2.

Joonho Chang, Pennsylvania State U.; Kihyo Jung,

U. of Ulsan; Seung Ki Moon, Nanyang Techno logi cal U.; Wonmo Kim, Andris Freivalds, and

Timothy W. Simpson, Pennsylvania State U.;

Seon Pill Baik, LG Electronics, Determination of Optimal Location of Circuit Board and

Battery on 3-D Glasses by Considering Nose

Load and Subjective Discomfort

3.

Jesse L. Eisert, Daniel Gartenberg, Ross Thornton, and Robert J. Youmans, George Mason U., Opti mal Interface Location and Limits of Gesture

Proficiency in an Automobile

4.

Matthieu B. Trudeau and Justin G. Young, Harvard

School of Public Health; Devin L. Jindrich, Cali fornia State U., San Marcos; Jack T. Dennerlein,

Harvard School of Public Health, Thumb Motor

Performance Is Greater for Two-Handed Grip

Compared to Single-Handed Grip on a Mobile

Phone

5.

Inki Kim, Pennsylvania State U.; Jang Hyeon Jo,

Samsung Electronics, Adjusting Fitts’ Para digm for Small Touch-Sensitive Input Device With

Large Group of Users

PP4 – AUGMENTED REALITY: IMPLICA TIONS

TOWARD VIRTUAL REALITY, HUMAN PER -

CEPTION, AND PERFORMANCE

Alternative Format

Wednesday, October 24, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Grand Ballroom C/D (Concourse Level)

Perception & Performance; cosponsored by

Virtual Environments

Chair: Rebecca Grier, Inst. for Defense Analyses;

Cochair: Hari Thiruvengada, Honeywell

Panelists: H. Thiruvengada, Honeywell; S. R. Ellis,

NASA; P. Havig, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; K. S.

Hale, Design Interactive; J. G. Hollands, Defence

R&D Canada

26 O C TO B E R 2 4 – W E D N E S D AY

S3 – IMPROVING PUBLIC RESPONSE TO

DISASTER WARNINGS

Discussion Panel

Wednesday, October 24, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Webster (Lobby Level)

Safety

Chair: Marita O’Brien, U. of Alabama-Huntsville

Panelists: Ellen J. Bass, U. of Virginia; James P. Bliss,

Old Dominion U.; Nancy J. Cooke, Arizona State U.;

Michael J. Kalsher, Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst.;

Christopher P. Mayhorn, North Carolina State U.

SF3 – HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION

AND SIMULATION

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Student Forum

Chair: Marita O’Brien, U. of Alabama-Huntsville;

Cochair: Michael Montano, Old Dominion U.

1.

Elizabeth Phillips and Aaron S. Dietz, U. of

Central Florida, An Empirical Usability

Evaluation of the Human Factors Website

2.

Fei Gao and Missy Cummings, Massachusetts

Inst. of Technology, Using Discrete Event Simulation to Model Multirobot, Multioperator

Teamwork

3.

David Brent Gerritsen, Kyle Gagnon, Jeanine

Stefanucci, and Frank Drews, U. of Utah, I’d Like to Introduce You to My Desktop: Toward a

Theory of Social Human-Computer Inter action

4.

Zannah Matson, Birsen Donmez, and Beth Savan,

U. of Toronto; David Photiadis, Delphi Consulting

Group; Elham Farahani, Postdam Inst. for Climate

Research Impact; Joanna Dafoe, Yale U., Social

Drivers of Technology Adoption and Use in the Workplace Productivity Context

5.

Christopher M. Kelley, Kyung Wha Hong,

Christopher B. Mayhorn, and Emerson Murphy-

Hill, North Carolina State U., Something Smells

Phishy: Exploring Definitions, Consequences, and Reactions to Phishing

Wednesday, October 24

12:00 noon–1:30 p.m.

Technical Groups Networking/

Business Meetings

Aging

12:00 noon–1:30 p.m. (lunch; reserve at HFES Central)

Lewis (Conference Level)

Perception & Performance

12:00 noon–1:30 p.m. (lunch; reserve at HFES Central)

Sauciety Restaurant (Lobby Level)

Wednesday, October 24

1:30–3:00 p.m.

AC2 – MODELING THE COMPLEX

DYNAMICS OF TEAMWORK FROM TEAM

COGNITION TO NEUROPHYSIOLOGY

Discussion Panel

Wednesday, October 24, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Augmented Cognition

Chair: Nancy J. Cooke, Arizona State U.; Cochair:

Michelle E. Harper, Aptima, Inc

Panelists: Polemnia G. Amazeen, Arizona State U.;

Jamie C. Gorman, Texas Tech U.; Stephen J. Guastello,

Marquette U.; Aaron Likens, Arizona State U.; Ron

Stevens, UCLA/IMMEX

Wednesday

Oct. 24

AS3 – THE DESIGN OF THE UAS GROUND

CONTROL STATION: CHALLENGES AND

SOLUTIONS FOR ENSURING SAFE FLIGHT

IN CIVILIAN SKIES

Discussion Panel

Wednesday, October 24, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom II (Conference Level)

Aerospace Systems

Chair: Beth Blickensderfer, Embry-Riddle

Aeronautical U.; Cochair: Julian Archer, Purdue U.

Panelists: Timothy J. Buker, SAIC; Stephen P. Luxion,

U.S. Air Force; Beth Lyall, Research Integrations, Inc.;

Kelly Neville, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; Kevin W.

Williams, FAA Civil Aerospace Medical Inst.

O C TO B E R 2 4 – W E D N E S D AY 27

CE8 – ORIGINS AND DESTINATIONS:

30 YEARS OF COGNITIVE SYSTEMS

ENGINEERING

Discussion Panel

Wednesday, October 24, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom C/D (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: David Woods, Ohio State U.; Cochair: Emilie

Roth, Roth Cognitive Engineering

Panelists: Amy R. Pritchett, Georgia Inst. of Technol ogy;

Christopher Nemeth, Applied Research Assoc.; Karen

Feigh, Georgia Inst. of Technology; Michael Feary,

NASA Ames Research Ctr.; Jonathan D. Pfautz, Charles

River Analytics Inc.; Shawn Weil, Aptima, Inc.

Wednesday

Oct. 24

CS3/I – USER EXPERIENCE DAY: BEST

PAPER COMPETITION

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Computer Systems; cosponsored with Internet

Chair: Lorraine Normore, Normore Research Group;

Cochair: Robert Pastel, Michigan Technological U.

1.

Joseph H. Goldberg, Oracle America, Inc., Relat ing Perceived Web Page Complexity to Emo tional Valence and Eye Movement Metrics

2.

Kevin A. Juang, Sanjay Ranganayakulu, and Joel S.

Greenstein, Clemson U., Using System-

Generated Mnemonics to Improve the Usabil ity and Security of Password Authentication

3.

Ralph H. Cullen, Virginia Polytechnic Inst. and

State U.; Wendy A. Rogers and Arthur D. Fisk,

Georgia Inst. of Technology, The Effects of

Automation Reliability and Experience on

Attention in a Computer Environment

4.

Min Wu and Arin Bhowmick, Oracle Corp., Task-

Centered Context Manager for Customer

Relationship Management Systems

5.

Andres A. Calvo, Ball Aerospace; Gregory M.

Burnett and Victor S. Finomore, U.S. Air Force

Research Lab; Saverio Perugini, U. of Dayton,

The Design, Implementation, and Evaluation of a Pointing Device for a Wearable Computer

E3 – INCORPORATING INDUSTRY GOALS

INTO ACADEMIC PROGRAMS: A CASE

STUDY OF A SUCCESSFUL EFFORT

Discussion Panel

Wednesday, October 24, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Commonwealth A (Concourse Level)

Education

Chair: Michael C. Bartha, Hewlett-Packard

Panelists: S. Camille Peres, U. of Houston-Clear Lake;

Christy Harper, Hewlett-Packard; Kritina Holden,

Lockheed Martin; Melissa Meingast, Hewlett-Packard;

Andrew Muddimer, Schlumberger Information Services;

Danielle Smith, PayPal

GS7 – ARNOLD M. SMALL LECTURE IN

SAFETY—FROM THE NANOSCALE TO THE

HUMAN SCALE: CONNECTING NANOTECH -

NOLOGY AND HUMAN FACTORS

Invited Address

Wednesday, October 24, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

General Sessions; consponsored by Safety

Chair: Michael J. Kalsher, Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst.

Invited Speaker: Andrew D. Maynard, U. of Michigan

ID3 – INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN PER -

FORMANCE, WORKLOAD, AND STRESS

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Douglas (Mezzanine Level)

Individual Differences

Chair: Thomas Fincannon, U. of Central Florida;

Cochair: Tarah Schmidt, U. of Central Florida

1.

James L. Szalma and Grace W. L. Teo, U. of Cen tral Florida, The Joint Effect of Task Charac teristics and Extraversion on the Performance,

Workload, and Stress of Signal Detection

2.

Sol I. Lim, Jin C. Woo, Sangwoo Bahn, and

Chang S. Nam, North Carolina State U., The

Effects of Individuals’ Mood State and Per sonality Trait on the Cognitive Processing of Emotional Stimuli

3.

Michelle R. Bryant and Anne Collins McLaughlin,

North Carolina State U., Predicting and Main taining the Challenge Point Through the

Study of Individual Differences

4.

Travis M. Kent, Matthew D. Marraffino, Maxine B.

Najle, Anne Marie Sinatra, and Valerie K. Sims,

U. of Central Florida, Effects of Input Modality and Expertise on Workload and Video Game

Performance

28 O C TO B E R 2 4 – W E D N E S D AY

5.

Aaron S. Dietz, Mary Jane Sierra, Kimberly Smith-

Jentsch, and Eduardo Salas, U. of Central Florida,

Guiding Principles for Team Stress Measure ment

ME1 – MACROERGONOMICS AND SAFETY

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Macroergonomics

Chair: Michelle M. Robertson, Liberty Mutual Research

Inst. for Safety; Cochair: A. Joy Riviera-Rodriguez,

Clemson U.

1.

Todd William Loushine, U. of Wisconsin-

Whitewater, Macroergonomic Approach to

Safety Culture/Climate: A Healthcare Facility

Case Study

2.

Linda Pierce, Cristina Byrne, and Clara Williams,

Federal Aviation Admin., Evaluation of an FAA

Maintenance Agency Using an Organization

Development Approach

3.

Susan Sung Eun Chung and Alan Hedge, Cornell

U., A LISREL Analysis of Work-Related

Musculoskeletal Disorders in Office Workers

4.

Gloria Foley, U. of Massachusetts, Lowell,

MacroErgonomics in Education: a Postsec ondary School 1:1 iPad Tablet PC Initiative

5.

Ann Schoofs Hundt, Pascale Carayon, Peter

Hoonakker, Randi Cartmill, and Ruth Den Herder,

U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Joan Topper, Jim

Younkin, and James Walker, Geisinger Health

System, Organizational Learning in a Largescale Complex Health IT Project

POS3 – POSTERS 3

Poster Session

Wednesday, October 24, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Galleria Exhibit Hall (Galleria Level)

Posters

Poster sessions are 90 minutes only; presenters are required to be present throughout the session.

Cognitive Engineering and Decision Making

1.

Marie-Eve Jobidon, Alexandra Muller-Gass,

Matthew Duncan, and Ann-Renée Blais, Defence

R&D Canada-Toronto, The Enhancement of

Mental Models and Its Impact on Teamwork

2.

Benoit R. Vallières, U. Laval; Helen M. Hodgetts,

Cardiff U.; François Vachon and Sébastien

Tremblay, U. Laval, Supporting Change

Detection in Complex Dynamic Situations:

Does the CHEX Serve Its Purpose?

3.

David Schuster, Joseph R. Keebler, Florian

Jentsch, and Jorge Zuniga, U. of Central Florida,

Comparison of SA Measurement Techniques in a Human-Robot Team Task

4.

Patricia Sue Bockelman Morrow and Stephen M.

Fiore, U. of Central Florida, Supporting Human-

Robot Teams in Social Dynamicism: An Over view of the Metaphoric Inference Framework

5.

Margo Mae Woller-Carter, Michigan Technologi cal U.; Yasmina Okan, U. of Granada, Spain;

Edward T. Cokely, Michigan Technological U.;

Rocio Garcia-Retamero, U. of Granada, Spain,

Communicating and Distorting Risks With

Graphs: An Eye-Tracking Study

6.

Jonathan Streater, Patricia Sue Bockelman Morrow, and Stephen M. Fiore, U. of Central Florida,

Making Things That Understand People: The

Beginnings of an Interdisciplinary Approach for Engineering Computational Social Intelli gence

7.

Aleksandra Stankovic, Mike Aitken, and Luke

Clark, U. of Cambridge, An Eye-Tracking Study of Cognitive and Motor Impulsivity Under

Stress

8.

Daniel J Schantz, Rosemarie Yagoda, Thomas

Stokes, and Jim Creagor, North Carolina State U.,

Observations of Target Acquisition Behavior:

Using Remote Control Robots With Fixed

Rate of Speed

Health Care

9.

Bernadette McCrory and Bethany R. Lowndes, U.

of Nebraska; Darcy L. Thompson, U. of Nebraska

Medical Ctr.; Emily E. Miller and Jakeb D. Riggle,

U. of Nebraska; Michael C. Wadman, U. of

Nebraska Medical Ctr.; M. Susan Hallbeck, U. of

Nebraska, Workload Comparison of Intraoral

Mask to Standard Mask Ventilation Using a

Cadaver Model

10. Anping Xie, Pascale Carayon, Michelle M. Kelly,

Yaqiong Li, Randi Cartmill, Lori L. DuBenske,

Roger L. Brown, and Elizabeth D. Cox, U. of

Wisconsin-Madison, Managing Different Per spectives in the Redesign of Family-Centered

Rounds in a Pediatric Hospital

11. Kyle Heyne, Elizabeth Lazzara, Joseph Keebler,

Lauren Benishek, and Eduardo Salas, U. of Central

Florida, Best Practices for the Effec tive Imple mentation of Telerounding

12. A. Zach Hettinger and Rollin J. Fairbanks,

MedStar Inst. for Innovation, Recognition of

Patient Selection Errors in a Simulated Com puterized Provider Order Entry System

Wednesday

Oct. 24

O C TO B E R 2 4 – W E D N E S D AY 29

Wednesday

Oct. 24

13. Bashar M. Alyousef, Pascale Carayon, Peter

Hoonakker, Ann Schoofs Hundt, and Randi

Cartmill, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Janet

Tomcavage and Doreen Salek, Geisinger Health

Plan; Andrea Hassol, Abt Assoc.; Kimberly

Chaundy, Jim Younkin, and James Walker,

Geisinger Health System, Care Managers’

Challenges in Using Multiple Health IT

Applications

Safety

14. John Fitzgerald Sprufera and Anne Collins

McLaughlin, North Carolina State U., A Process for Accident Analysis in an Unregulated Context: Adapting the Human Factors Accident

Classification System to Rock Climbing

15. Jesseca Rosanne Israel Taylor and Michael S.

Wogalter, North Carolina State U., Acceptability of Evacuation Instruction Fire Warnings

Virtual Environments

16. Valerie Rice, Petra Alfred, Jessica Villarreal,

Angela Jeter, and Gary Boykin, U.S. Army

Research Lab, Human Factors Issues Associ ated With Teaching Over a Virtual World

17. Behrang Keshavarz and Heiko Hecht, U. Mainz,

Visually Induced Motion Sickness and

Presence in Videogames: The Role of Sound

18. Amy S. Bolling, U. of Central Florida, A Phenom enological Interview Method for Informal

Science Learning

19. John D. Hill and Jonathan A. Salzman, Michigan

Technological U., Enhancing Speed Perception in Virtual Environments Through Training

University Lab Posters

20. Georgia Institute of Technology, Engineering

Psychology Program

21. Virginia Polytechnic Inst. and State U.,

Assessment and Cognitive Ergonomics Lab,

Human-Computer Interaction Lab, Virginia Tech

Locomotion Research Laboratory, Vehicle Research and Simulation Lab, Virginia Tech Transportation

Inst., Vision Research Lab, Auditory Systems Lab,

Industrial Ergonomics and Biomechanics Lab,

Lab for User-Centric Innovations in Design,

Macro ergonomics and Group Decision Systems

Lab, Occupational and Construction Hazard Re duction Engineering Lab, Safety Engineering Lab

22. Wichita State U., SURL, Perception & Atten tion, Visual Perception & Cognition, Visual Psycho physics, NIAR

23. Purdue U., HFES Student Chapter

24. California State U.-Long Beach, Ctr. for

Human Factors in Advanced Aeronautics

Technologies

25. Texas Tech U., Human Factors Psychology

Program

30

SD1 – WIDENING THE NET OF HSI IN THE

ARMY ACQUISITION PROCESS

Discussion Panel

Wednesday, October 24, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Webster (Lobby Level)

System Development

Chair: Pamela A. Savage-Knepshield, U.S. Army

Research Lab

Panelists: Gabriella Brick Larkin, Lamar Garrett,

Anthony Morris, Anna Mares, Cheryl Burns, and

James Davis, U.S. Army Research Lab

ST3 – DRIVER VISUAL BEHAVIOR

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Surface Transportation

Chair: Joel Cooper, Precision Driving Research;

Cochair: Francis T. Durso, Georgia Inst. of Technology

1.

Gregory M. Fitch and Jonathan M. Hankey,

Virginia Tech Transportation Inst., Investigating

Improper Lane Changes: Driver Performance

Contributing to Lane Change Near-Crashes

2.

Genevieve M. Heckman, Robyn S. Kim, Sherry

Lin, Robert Rauschenberger, Douglas E. Young, and Robert Lange, Exponent Failure Analysis

Assoc., Driver’s Visual Behavior During

Backing Tasks: Factors Affecting the Use of Rearview Camera Displays

3.

Stephanie A. Whetsel, Ashley A. Stafford, Patrick

J. Rosopa, and Richard A. Tyrrell, Clemson U.,

The Accuracy of Drivers’ Judgments of the

Effects of Headlight Glare on Pedestrian

Recognition at Night

4.

Kip Smith, Naval Postgraduate School; Jan-Erik

Källhammer, Autoliv Research, Experimental

Evidence for the Field of Safe Travel

5.

Vaughan W. Inman, Science Applications Inter national Corp., Conspicuity of Traffic Signs

Assessed by Eye Tracking and Immediate

Recall

O C TO B E R 2 4 – W E D N E S D AY

T2 – TRAINING AND RETENTION OF

KNOWLEDGE

Lecture

Wednesday, October 24, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Stone (Lobby Level)

Training

Chair: Marianne Paulsen, U.S. Navy/NAWCTSD

1.

A. Kluge, U. of Duisburg-Essen; D. Burkolter, U.

of Groningen; B. Frank, U. of Duisburg-Essen,

“Being Prepared for the Infrequent”: A Com parative Study of Two Refresher Training Ap proaches and Their Effects on Temporal and

Adaptive Transfer in a Process Control Task

2.

Vera Hagemann, Annette Kluge, and Joseph Greve,

U. of Duisburg-Essen, Measuring the Effects of

Team Resource Management Training for the

Fire Service

3.

Jason H. Wong and Anh B. Nguyen, Naval Under sea Warfare Ctr., Developing and Assessing

Immersive Content for Naval Training:

Lessons Learned in the Virtual World

4.

Alexander J. Stimpson, Massachusetts Inst. of

Technology; Luisa S. Buinhas, Delft U. of Tech nol ogy; Scott Bezek, Yves Boussemart, and M. L.

Cummings, Massachusetts Inst. of Technology,

A Model-Based Measure to Assess Operator

Adherence to Procedures

5.

Olga Kramarova, California State U., Northridge;

Robert Jason Youmans, George Mason U., Cog nition and Kinesiology: A Dual-Strategy

Approach to Remembering Choreography

TE3 – THE NOTE-TAKER’S PERSPECTIVE

DURING USABILITY TESTING: A HANDS-

ON APPROACH TO RECOGNIZING WHAT’S

IMPORTANT, WHAT ISN’T

Alternative Format

Wednesday, October 24, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Otis (Lobby Level)

Test & Evaluation

Chair: Dick Horst, UserWorks, Inc.; Cochair: Kristen

Davis, UserWorks, Inc.

Wednesday, October 24

3:15–6:30 p.m.

Technical Group Networking/

Business Meetings

Aerospace Systems

3:30–5:30 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom II (Conference Level)

Augmented Cognition

3:30–5:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision

Making

3:30–5:15 p.m.

Grand Ballroom C/D (Concourse Level)

Communications

3:30–4:30 p.m.

Commonwealth A (Concourse Level)

Computer Systems/Internet

3:30–5:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Environmental Design/

Macroergonomics

3:45–5:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Forensics Professional

4:30–5:30 p.m.

Webster (Lobby Level)

Health Care

3:15–4:30 p.m.

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Human Performance Modeling

5:30–6:30 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Industrial Ergonomics

3:30–4:30 p.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Internet/Computer Systems

3:30–5:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Macroergonomics/Environmental

Design

3:45–5:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

O C TO B E R 2 4 – W E D N E S D AY 31

Wednesday

Oct. 24

Program at a Glance

8:00 – 10:00 a.m.

Monday

Morning-Only Workshops,

8:30 a.m. – 12:00 noon

WK1 Introduction to R and Basic Statistical Analysis,

Webster

WK3 Cognitive Neuroscience for the HF Practitioner,

Douglas

WK4 Mindfulness in the Workplace, Otis

Full-Day Workshops, 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.

WK8 Questionnaire Design, Alcott

WK10 Designing to Enhance Situation Awareness, Adams

WK11 How To Be an Effective HF/E Witness, Stone

9:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m.

SF1 Student Career & Professional Development Day,

Harbor II

Tuesday

8:00 – 10:00 a.m.

PL Opening Plenary Session, Grand Ballroom

10:30 – 12:00 noon Morning-Only Workshops continue

Full-Day Workshops continue

Student Career and Professional

Development Day continues

AS1 Enhancing Safety in Aviation Systems, Stone

CE1 Cognitive Systems Engineering: Looking Back, Grand A

E1 Research on HF/E Pedagogy, Commonwealth A

FP1 Forensic Issues in Warnings, Products, & Falls, Webster

GS1 Future HF/E Professors and Researchers, Harbor I

HC1 HF Contributions to EHR Usability & Patient Safety,

Harbor III

ID1 Multidisciplinary Concepts in Ergonomic Design,

Douglas

IE1 Tablets, Keyboards, Pointing Devices, & Computer

Work, Harbor II

PD1 Synectics: A Creative Approach to Product

Innovation, Burroughs

PP1 Getting Users’ Attention, Grand E

ST1 Driver Distraction & Drowsy Driving, Otis

1:30 – 3:00 p.m.

Full-Day Workshops continue

Afternoon-Only Workshops, 1:30 – 5:00 p.m.

WK5 Data Management & Visualization With R, Webster

WK6 Beyond the Usability Lab, Otis

Student Career and Professional

Development Day continues

A1 Healthy & Engaged Aging, Stone

AC1 Advances for an Augmented Future, Harbor II

CE2 Collaborative Automation Across Varying Time

Scales, Grand A

CE3 Advances in Support System Design, Grand C/D

ED1 Environmental Design for Special Populations, Douglas

GS2 Human Factors/Ergonomics Gone Wild, Burroughs

HC2 Design & Ergonomics, Harbor III

PP2 Multisensory Tactile Systems for Soldiers, Grand E

S1 Mental Workload, Situation Awareness, &

Technology, Commonwealth A

ST2 Driver Assistance Systems, Otis

TE1 Analysis, Evaluation, & Usability Testing, Harbor I

VE1 Me & My VE, Adams

3:30 – 5:00 p.m.

Full-Day Workshops continue

Afternoon-Only Workshops continue

P RO G R A M AT A G L A N C E

Evening 4:45 – 6:15 p.m.: National Ergonomics Month Expo,

Harbor Foyer

5:30 – 6:30 p.m.: First-Timers & Fellows Reception,

Harbor I/II

6:30 – 9:30 p.m.: Gala Opening Reception, Grand

CE4 Impact of Risk, Safety, & Alerting, Grand C/D

CE5 Perspectives on Situated Cognition in Cyber Security,

Harbor II

DEM1 Interactive Demonstrations, Grand B

FP2 Perceiving Relative Speed in High-Speed Rear-End

Crashes, Webster

GS3 Health Care Simulation Training Systems Designer’s

Forum, Burroughs

GS4 General Sessions Lectures, Otis

HC3 Nursing, Harbor III

I1/CS Security, Privacy, & Trust, Harbor I

POS1 Posters 1, Galleria Exhibit Hall

PD2 User-Centered Product Design Award, Stone

PP3 Operating Systems in Simulated, Virtual, & Faraway

S2

Environments, Grand E

Accident Analysis, Risk Assessment, & Human

Reliability, Commonwealth A

SF2 Biomechanics, Ergonomics, & Haptics, Douglas

5:00 – 6:00 p.m.: Student Reception, Grand A

6:00 – 7:30 p.m.: HFES Annual Business Meeting, Grand E

Wednesday

8:30 – 10:00 a.m.

AS2 Human-Technology Interaction in Aviation Systems,

Harbor II

CE6 Approaches to Cognitive Bias in Serious Games,

Grand A

CS1/I UX Day Keynote: The Human Factors of “Simple”

Devices, Harbor II

FP3 How to Present Human Factors Testimony to the

Trier of Fact, Webster

GS5 Human Factors Prize Session, Grand C/D

HC4 Context, Harbor III

HP1 Evaluating Models of Human Performance, Grand E

ID2 Individual Differences in Human Interaction With

Automation, Robots, & Computers, Douglas

POS2 Posters 2, Galleria Exhibit Hall

T1 Learning, Feedback, & Decision Making, Stone

TE2 Evaluating Design Efficacy, Burroughs

VE2 Applications in Gaming,Training, & Decision Making, Otis

A2 Older Adults Are Everywhere! Stone

CE7 Investigating Assessments & Decisions, Grand A

CS2/I User Experience & Agile Development, Harbor I

E2 Fitts Education Award Winners, Commonwealth A

ED2 Environmental Design, Douglas

GS6 Problems in Applying Engineering Anthropometry,

Grand E

HC5 Developing Methods to Measure Health Care Team

Performance, Harbor III

IE2 Underlying Factors of Musculoskeletal Disorders,

Harbor II

PD3 Hardware Design for Interaction, Otis

PP4 Augmented Reality Implications, Grand C/D

S3 Improving Public Response to Disaster Warnings,

Webster

SF3 Human-Computer Interaction & Simulation, Burroughs

AC2 Modeling the Complex Dynamics of Teamwork,

Harbor III

AS3 Design of the UAS Ground Control Station, Harbor II

CE8 30 Years of Cognitive Systems Engineering, Grand C/D

CS3/I UX Day Best Paper Competition, Harbor I

E3 Incorporating Industry Goals Into Academic Programs,

Commonwealth A

GS7 Arnold Small Lecture: From the Nanoscale to the

Human Scale, Grand A

ID3 Individual Differences in Performance, Workload,

& Stress, Douglas

ME1 Macroergonomics & Safety, Grand E

POS3 Posters 3, Galleria Exhibit Hall

SD1 Widening the Net of HSI in the Army Acquisition

Process, Webster

ST3 Driver Visual Behavior, Burroughs

T2 Training & Retention of Knowledge, Stone

TE3 The Note-Taker’s Perspective During Usability

Testing, Otis

3:00 – 6:30 p.m.

Technical Group Networking/Business Meetings (see p. 6)

Thursday

8:30 – 10:00 a.m.

AS4 Human Factors at the FAA, Harbor I

CE9 Trust in Computers & Robots, Grand A

GS8 10 Things to Know About Decision Making, Grand C/D

HC6 Human Factors for the Hidden Network in Medicine,

Harbor III

HC7 Using HF & Systems Engineering to Improve Care

Coordination, Burroughs

HP2 Aviation & Military, Commonwealth A

I2/CS Physical Topics & Methods, Harbor II

IE3 Ergonomics, Biomechanics, & Muscle Physiology,

Grand E

POS4 Posters 4, Galleria Exhibit Hall

PP5 Auditory & Visual Displays, Otis

SF4 Automation & Human Performance, Stone

ST4 New Methods for Data Analysis & Design, Webster

T3 Training & Virtual Environments, Douglas

Friday

8:30 – 10:00 a.m.

CE14 Control of Multiple UAVs, Grand A

CE15 Exploring Cognitive Readiness in Complex

Operational Environments, Commonwealth B/C

HC13 Literacy & Special Populations, Harbor III

HC14 Learning About Health Care, Grand C/D

IE7 Ergonomic Assessment Methods, Webster

PD7 Software Design Usability, Burroughs

PP9 Research on Sustained Attention & Workload,

S5

Grand E

Transportation Research Into Practice, Douglas

ST6 Driving Simulators & Vehicle Interiors, Otis

VE4 Current & Future VE Trends, Stone

AC3 The EEG Session, Harbor II

AS5 HF Issues for Interaction With Bio-Inspired Swarms,

Burroughs

C1 Team Communication, Otis

CE10 Cognition in Modeling & Design, Grand A

CE11 Investigating the Cognition of Luggage Screening,

Grand C/D

FP4 Forensic Issues in Transportation & Disabilities,

Harbor I

HC8 Information Requirements for Communication at

Handovers, Harbor III

HP3 Ergonomics & Vision, Commonwealth A

IE4 Applications of NIRS in Ergonomics & Human Factors,

Grand E

PD4 Design Practice, Stone

SD2 System Development Potpourri, Webster

T4 Training Applications in Nonstandard Environments,

Douglas

AS6 Methodologies for the Design of Future Aviation

Systems, Burroughs

CE12 New Approaches to Analyzing Work, Grand A

GS9 Operational Context of Procedures & Checklists in

Commercial Aviation, Grand C/D

HC9 Handoff Communication, Harbor III

HC10 Safety & Fatigue, Harbor I

ID4 Individual Differences Models & Methods for

Prediction, Commonwealth A

IE5 Assessment of Upper Extremity Musculoskeletal

Disorders, Grand E

PD5 Product Design Considerations, Stone

PP6 Design of Controls, Otis

S4 Safety Alerts, Fall Prevention, Nuclear Power, Douglas

SF5 Attention & Memory, Harbor II

ST5 Driver Attitudes Toward Monitoring, Webster

AS7 Human Factors Challenges for Future Air Traffic

Controllers, Grand A

C2 Beyond the Spoken Word, Stone

CE16 Is Cognitive Engineering a Player in Military

Research & Development Today?

E5

Commonwealth B/C

Computers & HF/E Education, Webster

HC15 Collaboration/Communication, Harbor III

HC16 Simulation-Based Training Across the Medical

Education Continuum, Grand

PD8 Design Theory & Concepts, Burroughs

PP10 Research on Systems for Command & Control

S6

Environments, Grand E

Prevention of High-Consequence Incidents, Douglas

ST7 Reducing Major Rule Violations in Commuter Rail

Operations, Otis

CE13 Cognitive Engineering for Teams, Grand A

E4 Expectations for Future HF/E Programs, Douglas

HC11 Human Factors in the Wild, Harbor III

HC12 Ergonomic Aspects of Clinical and Surgical

Procedures, Burroughs

HP4 Modeling Supervisory Control, Emotion, Training, &

Cognition, Commonwealth A

IE6 Lifting, Material Handling, & Low Back Assessment

Methods, Grand E

ME2 Macroergonomics in Health Care, Harbor I

PD6 Product Design & Emotion, Stone

PP7 Developing & Measuring Expertise, Otis

PP8 Multimodal Cueing, Grand C/D

SF6 Student Research Potpourri, Harbor II

VE3 Virtual Reality, Virtual Humans, & Robots, Webster

P RO G R A M AT A G L A N C E

Thursday

Oct. 25

Safety

5:30–6:30 p.m.

Otis (Lobby Level)

Surface Transportation

5:00–6:30 p.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Training

3:30–5:30 p.m.

Stone (Lobby Level)

Virtual Environments

3:30–4:30 p.m.

Otis (Lobby Level)

Thursday, October 25

8:30–10:00 a.m.

AS4 – HUMAN FACTORS AT THE FEDERAL

AVIATION ADMINISTRATION (FAA): FROM

RESEARCH TO REALITY

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Aerospace Systems; cosponsored by Safety

Chair: Michelle Yeh, Federal Aviation Admin.; Cochair:

Cathy Swider, Federal Aviation Admin.

Panelists: Cathy Swider, Kathy Abbott, Colleen

Donovan, Eric Neiderman, and Dino Piccione,

Federal Aviation Admin.

CE9 – TRUST IN COMPUTERS AND ROBOTS

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Robert R. Hoffman, Inst. for Human &

Machine Cognition

Panelists: David Atkinson, Inst. for Human & Machine

Cognition; Peter Hancock, U. of Central Florida; John

D. Lee, U. of Wisconsin; Ericka Rovira, U.S. Military

Academy; Charlene Stokes, U.S. Air Force Research

Lab; Alan R. Wagner, Georgia Inst. of Technology

GS8 – 10 THINGS HUMAN FACTORS

PROFESSIONALS NEED TO KNOW ABOUT

DECISION MAKING

Invited Address

Thursday, October 25, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Grand Ballroom C/D (Concourse Level)

General Sessions; cosponsored by Education &

Training Committee

Chair: Nancy J. Stone, Missouri U. of Science and

Technology

Invited Speaker: Gary Klein, MacroCognition, LLC

HC6 – CLINICAL COMMUNICATIONS—

HUMAN FACTORS FOR THE HIDDEN

NETWORK IN MEDICINE

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: Wayne Zachary, CMZ Health Technologies, LLC

Panelists: Russell C. Maulitz, Drexel U.; Michael A.

Rosen, Johns Hopkins U.; Janis Cannon-Bowers and

Eduardo Salas, U. of Central Florida

HC7 – USING HUMAN FACTORS AND SYS -

TEMS ENGINEERING TO IMPROVE CARE

COORDINATION

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: Yan Xiao, Baylor Health Care System

Panelists: Ann M. Bisantz, U. at Buffalo, SUNY;

Pascale Carayon, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Anne

Miller, Vanderbilt U. Medi cal Ctr.; Adjhaporn

Khunlertkit and Alicia Arbaje, Johns Hopkins U.

HP2 – AVIATION & MILITARY

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Commonwealth A (Concourse Level)

Human Performance Modeling

Chair: Charneta Samms, U.S. Army Research Lab.

1.

Wenbi Wang, Defence R&D Canada, Workload

Assessment in Human Performance Models

Using the Secondary-Task Technique

2.

Felix Maiwald and Axel Schulte, Bundeswehr U.

Munich, Adaptation of a Human Resource

Model by the Use of Machine Learning Meth ods as Part of a Military Helicopter Pilot

Associate System

32 O C TO B E R 2 5 – T H U R S D AY

3.

Marianne Paulsen and Thomas J. Alicia, Naval Air

Warfare Ctr. Training Systems Division; David M.

Shrader, Kaegan Corp., Modeling Algorithms for Predicting the Effects of Human Perfor mance in the Presence of Environmental

Stressors

4.

Angelia Sebok and Christopher Wickens, Alion

Science and Technology; Nadine Sarter, U. of

Michigan; Corey Koenecke, Alion Science and

Technology, The Multimodal Evaluation

Module: Design and Validation of a Model-

Based Tool to Predict Pilot Noticing of

Multimodal Information on the Flight Deck

5.

Bonnie E. John, IBM; Evan W. Patton and Wayne

D. Gray, Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst.; Donald F.

Morrison, Carnegie Mellon U., Tools for Pre dicting the Duration and Variability of Skilled

Performance Without Skilled Performers

I2/CS – PHYSICAL TOPICS AND METHODS

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Harbor Ballroom II (Conference Level)

Internet; cosponsored by Computer Systems

Chair: Betty Murphy, Human Solutions, Inc.; Cochair:

Kapil Chailil Madathil, Clemson U.

1.

Robert Pastel, Michigan Technological U.,

Precise Positioning on Computer Monitors:

Comparison of Mouse and Scroll Wheel in

One Dimension

2.

Eunjung Choi, Sunghyuk Kwon, Donghun Lee,

Hojin Lee, and Min K. Chung, Pohang U. of

Science and Technology, Can User-Derived

Gesture Be Considered as the Best Gesture for a Command? Focusing on the Com mands for Smart Home System

3.

Abigail J. Werth and Kari Babski-Reeves, Missis sippi State U., Assessing Posture While Typing on Portable Computing Devices in Traditional

Work Environments and at Home

4.

Jenay M. Beer, Akanksha Prakash, Cory-Ann

Smarr, Tracy L. Mitzner, Charles C. Kemp, and

Wendy A. Rogers, Georgia Inst. of Technology,

“Commanding Your Robot”: Older Adults’

Preferences for Methods of Robot Control

5.

Michael P. Linegang and William F. Moroney, U.

of Dayton, Effects of Cover Letter Subject

Line and Open-Ended Question Response

Area on Responding to an Internet Survey

IE3 – ERGONOMICS, BIOMECHANICS, AND

MUSCLE PHYSIOLOGY

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Industrial Ergonomics

Chair: Patrick Dempsey, National Inst. for Occupa tional Safety and Health; Cochair: Steven Lavender,

Ohio State U

1.

Sean Gallagher, Auburn U., Weibull Analyses of the Fatigue Life of Human Tissues

2.

Xinhui Zhu, U. at Buffalo, SUNY; Gwanseob

Shin, Ulsan National Inst. of Science and Tech nol ogy, Changes in the Range of Lumbar

Flexion During Cyclic Stooping

3.

Lauren Gant, Nathan Fethke, and Fred Gerr, U. of

Iowa, Spectral Analysis of Root-Mean-Square

Processed Surface Electromyography Data as a Measure of Repetitive Muscular Exertion

4.

Suman Kanti Chowdhury, Ashish D. Nimbarte,

Majid Jaridi, and Robert C. Creese, West Virginia

U., Assessment of Neck and Shoulder Muscle

Fatigue Using Discrete Wavelet Transforms of Surface Electromyography

5.

Judith E. Gold, Feroze B. Mohamed, Sayed Ali, and Mary F. Barbe, Temple U., Serum and

MRI Biomarkers in Mobile Device Texting:

A Pilot Study

Thursday

Oct. 25

POS4 – POSTERS 4

Poster Session

Thursday, October 25, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Galleria Exhibit Hall (Galleria Level)

Posters

Poster sessions are 90 minutes only; presenters are required to be present throughout the session.

Aerospace Systems

1.

Yaniv Minkov, Ronny Ophir-Arbelle, and Tal Oron-

Gilad, Ben-Gurion U. of the Negev, Display Type

Effects in Military Operational Tasks Using

Unmanned Vehicle (UV) Video Images: Comparison Between Color and B/W Video Feeds

2.

James Michael Oglesby and Eduardo Salas, U. of

Central Florida, The Issue of Monotony and

Low Workload in Spaceflight: Considerations for the Mission to Mars

3.

Kelley M. Baker, Sara K. DiMare, Erik T. Nelson, and Deborah A. Boehm-Davis, George Mason U.,

Effect of Data Communications on Pilot

Situation Awareness, Decision Making, and

Workload

O C TO B E R 2 5 – T H U R S D AY 33

Thursday

Oct. 25

4.

Xiaochen Yuan, Joseph Shum, Kimberly Langer,

Mark Hancock, and Jonathan Histon, U. of Water loo, Investigating Collaborative Behaviors on

Interactive Tabletop Displays in Complex Task

Environments

5.

Kathleen L. Mosier, San Francisco State U.;

Ute Fischer, Georgia Inst. of Technology; Kerry

Cunningham, Alec Munc, Kendra Reich, and

Linda Tomko, San Francisco State U.; Judith

Orasanu, NASA Ames Research Ctr., Aviation

Decision Making Issues and Outcomes:

Evidence From ASRS and NTSB Reports

6.

Asaf Degani, GM Advance Technical Ctr., Israel;

David Iverson and Immanuel Barshi, NASA Ames

Research Ctr.; Peter J. Lu, Harvard U., Using

Medieval Architecture as Inspiration for Dis play Design: Parameter Interrelationships and Organizational Structure

7.

Mary Kim Ngo, Kim-Phuong L. Vu, and Elaine

Thorpe, California State U., Long Beach; Vernol

Battiste, NASA Ames Research Ctr.; Thomas Z.

Strybel, California State U., Long Beach,

Intuitiveness of Symbol Features for Air

Traffic Management

Aging

8.

Petra E. Alfred and Valerie J. Rice, U.S. Army

Research Lab, Age Differences in Simple and

Procedural Reaction Time Among Healthy

Military Personnel

9.

Xuefang Wu, Han T. Yeoh, Rahul Soangra, and

Thurmon E. Lockhart, Virginia Polytechnic Inst.

and State U., Investigation Into the Functional

Mobility Difference Between Obese and

Nonobese Elderly

Augmented Cognition

10. Kristin E. Schaefer, Jacquelyn G. Cook, Jeffrey K.

Adams, Jonathan Bell, Tracy L. Sanders, and P. A.

Hancock, U. of Central Florida, Augmented Emo tion and Its Remote Embodiment: The Impor tance of Design From Fiction to Reality

11. Emily B. J. Coffey, Montreal Neurological Inst./

McGill U.; Anne-Marie Brouwer and Jan B. F. van

Erp, TNO, Measuring Workload Using a Com bination of Electroencephalography and Near-

Infrared Spectroscopy

Education

12. Sloane Hoyle, S. Camille Peres, Kate Bruton, and

Trini Gutierrez, U. of Houston-Clear Lake, Usa bility of an Interactive Educational Website for Statistics

13. Melissa Paz, Brittany C. Sellers, Stephen M. Fiore, and Lindsey Richards, U. of Central Florida, Inte grating Principles of Environmental Sustain ability into Human Factors Education: A

Recommendation

34

Product Design

14. K. Blake Mitchell, Natick Soldier Research, Devel opment, and Engineering Ctr. (NSRDEC), Range of Motion and Reaches of Warfighters in Body

Armor

15. Claudia Ziegler Acemyan and Philip Kortum, Rice

U., The Relationship Between Trust and Usability in Systems

16. Jennifer Perchonok and Enid Montague, U. of

Wisconsin-Madison, The Need to Examine

Culture in Health Technology

17. Stephaine Ysebaert, Victor S. Finomore, Gregory

Burnett, and Jill Ritter, U.S. Air Force Research

Lab, The Effects of a Weighted Wrist-Mounted

Device on Marksmanship

18. Rylan M. Clark, Anand Tharanathan, and Joseph

Vargas, Honeywell, Designing for Appropriate

Degrees of Automation: A Practice Innova tion Framework Applied to Home Energy

Management

19. Kevin J. Toy, S. Camille Peres, Tasha Y. David,

Angelene Nery, and Ronald G. Phillips, U. of

Houston-Clear Lake, Examining User Prefer ences in Interacting With Touchscreen Devices

20. M. A. Sublette, C. M. Carswell, and W. Seidelman,

U. of Kentucky, A First Look at Identifying

Strategies People Use in Making Predictions

About Task Demand

University Lab Posters

21. Auburn U., Biomechanics Lab

22. Clemson U., Cognition, Aging, and Technology

Lab, Perception & Action Lab, Visual Perception

& Performance Lab, Leo Gugerty’s Lab

23. Cornell U., Human Factors and Ergonomics

Research Group

23. U. of Illinois at Chicago, Systems Engineering and Human Performance Modeling Lab

PP5 – AUDITORY & VISUAL DISPLAYS

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Otis (Lobby Level)

Perception & Performance

Chair: Stas Krupenia, Scania

1.

Rafael Patrick and Jason Kring, Embry-Riddle

Aero nautical U.; Maranda McBride, North Caro lina A&T State U.; Tomasz Letowski, U.S. Army

Research Lab, Conduction Equivalency Ratios:

A Means for Comparing the Frequency Re sponse of Bone and Air Conduction Auditory

Displays

2.

Hyewon Suh, Myounghoon Jeon, and Bruce N.

Walker, Georgia Inst. of Technology, Spearcons

Improve Navigation Performance and Per ceived Speediness in Korean Auditory Menus

O C TO B E R 2 5 – T H U R S D AY

3.

Nadine M. Moacdieh and Nadine B. Sarter, U. of

Michigan, Eye-Tracking Metrics: A Toolbox for Assessing the Effects of Clutter on Atten tion Allocation

4.

Shiyan Yang, Karan Shukla, and Thomas K. Ferris,

Texas A&M U., “Cognitive Efficiency” in Dis play Media: A First Investigation of Basic

Signal Dimensions

5.

Justin G. Hollands, Defence Research and Devel opment Canada, Toward a Comprehensive

Framework for Display Compatibility

SF4 – AUTOMATION AND HUMAN PERFOR -

MANCE

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Stone (Lobby Level)

Student Forum

Chair: Kimberly Culley, Old Dominion U., Cochair:

Samantha D. Jansen, Wichita State U.

1.

Adam G. Smith and Greg A. Jamieson, U. of

Toronto, Level of Automation Effects on Situ ation Awareness and Functional Specificity in Automation Reliance

2.

Kelly A. Eatchel, Heidi Kramer, and Frank Drews,

U. of Utah, The Effects of Interruption Con text on Task Performance

3.

Chiu Shun Dan, Georgia Inst. of Technology;

Ralph H. Cullen, Virginia Polytechnic Inst. and

State U.; Wendy A. Rogers and Arthur D. Fisk,

Georgia Inst. of Technology, Exploring Strategy

Use in a Multiple-Task Environment: Effects of Automation Reliability and Task Properties

4.

Megan Hardy and Douglas J. Gillan, North Caro lina State U., Voluntary Task-Switching

Patterns in Everyday Tasks of Different

Motivational Levels

5.

Hyo-Sang Yoo, Purdue U., Framework for

Designing Adaptive Automation

ST4 – NEW METHODS FOR DATA ANALYSIS

AND DESIGN

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Webster (Lobby Level)

Surface Transportation

Chair: Linda Ng Boyle, U. of Washington; Cochair:

Shaheen Ahmed, Mississippi State U.

1.

Mahtab Ghazizadeh and John D. Lee, U. of

Wisconsin-Madison, Consumer Complaints and

Traffic Fatalities: Insights from the NHTSA

Vehicle Owner’s Complaint Database

2.

Roger Trombley, Nate Rolfes, and John Shutko,

Ford Motor Co., Rapid Prototyping of Automo tive HMI Systems Utilizing Vector CANape and Mathworks Simulink

3.

Omri Yona, Avinoam Borowsky, Tal Oron-Gilad, and Yisrael Parmet, Ben-Gurion U. of the Negev,

The Use of a Homogeneity Measure to Iden tify Hazard Perception Abilities of Novices and Experienced Drivers in a Driving

Simulator

4.

Shannon C. Roberts and John D. Lee, U. of

Wisconsin-Madison, Using Agent-Based

Modeling to Predict the Diffusion of Safe

Teenage Driving Behavior Through an

Online Social Network

5.

Monica G. Lichty and Christian M. Richard,

Battelle, A Task-Analytic Approach for Esti mating Driver Task Demands on Specific

Roadway Sections

T3 – TRAINING AND VIRTUAL

ENVIRONMENTS

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Douglas (Mezzanine Level)

Training

Chair: Emily Wiese, Aptima, Inc.

1.

Michael B. Dillard, National Research Council;

David B. Boles and Sheila R. Black, U. of Alabama,

Bidirectional Resource Training of Simple and Complex Tasks

2.

Mirjam Haus, Ludwig Maximilians U. of Munich;

Chris Rooney, Jane Barnett, David Westley, and

William Wong, Middlesex U., Evaluating the

Effect of Startling and Surprising Events in

Immersive Training Systems for Emergency

Response

3.

Sae Schatz, MESH Solutions, LLC; Robert Wray and Jeremiah Folsom-Kovarik, Soar Technology;

Denise Nicholson, MESH Solutions, LLC, Adaptive Perceptual Training in a Virtual Envi ronment

4.

Jane Barnett, William Wong, and David Westley,

Middlesex U.; Rick Adderley and Michelle Smith,

A-E Solutions Ltd., Startle Reaction: Captur ing Experiential Cues to Provide Guidelines

Toward the Design of Realistic Training

Scenarios

5.

Joey C.Y. So, Robert W. Proctor, and Phillip S.

Dunston, Purdue U., Impact of Interrupting

Simulated Hydraulic Excavator Training

With Simulated Loader Training

Thursday

Oct. 25

O C TO B E R 2 5 – T H U R S D AY 35

Thursday

Oct. 25

Thursday, October 25

10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

AC3 – THE EEG SESSION

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Harbor Ballroom II (Conference Level)

Augmented Cognition

Chair: Wilfred Wells, Naval Medical Research Unit-

Dayton; Cochair: Heather Lum, Penn State Erie

1.

B. N. Penaranda and Carryl L. Baldwin, George

Mason U., Temporal Factors of EEG and

Artificial Neural Network Classifiers of

Mental Workload

2.

Grant S. Taylor and Christina Schmidt, U. of

Central Florida, Empirical Evaluation of the

Emotiv EPOC BCI Headset for the Detec tion of Mental Actions

3.

Benjamin Scott Goldberg, Keith W. Brawner, and

Heather K. Holden, U.S. Army Research Lab,

Efficacy of Measuring Engagement During

Computer-Based Training With Low-Cost

Electroencephalogram (EEG) Sensor Outputs

4.

Altyngul Kamzanova and Almira Kustubayeva,

Kazakh National U.; Gerald Matthews, U. of

Cincin nati, Diagnostic Monitoring of Vigilance

Decrement Using EEG Workload Indices

5.

Ronald Stevens, UCLA/IMMEX, Charting

Neu rodynamic Eddies in the Temporal

Flows of Teamwork

AS5 – HUMAN FACTORS ISSUES FOR INTER -

ACTION WITH BIO-INSPIRED SWARMS

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Aerospace Systems

Chair: Michael Lewis, U. of Pittsburgh; Cochair:

Michael Goodrich, Brigham Young U.

Panelists: Mike Goodrich, Brigham Young U.; Katia

Sycara, Carnegie Mellon U.; Marc Steinberg, Office of

Naval Research

C1 – TEAM COMMUNICATION

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Otis (Lobby Level)

Communication

Chair: Linda Pierce, Federal Aviation Administration;

Cochair: Carl F. Smith, Google

1.

Shree Jariwala, Michael Champion, Prashanth

Rajivan, and Nancy J. Cooke, Arizona State U.,

Influence of Team Communication and

Coordination on the Performance of Teams at the iCTF Competition

2.

Andrew Hampton, Valerie L. Shalin, and Eric

Robinson, Wright State U.; Brian Simpson and

Victor Finomore, U.S. Air Force Research Lab;

Jeffrey Cowgill and Thomas Moore, Wright State

U.; Terry Rapoch, Wright State Applied Research

Corp.; Robert Gilkey, Wright State U., The

Impact of Spatialized Communications on

Team Navigation

3.

Sheldon M. Russell, Gregory J. Funke, and

Benjamin A. Knott, U.S. Air Force Research Lab;

Adam J. Strang, Consortium Research Fellows

Program, Recurrence Quantification Analysis

Used to Assess Team Communication in

Simulated Air Battle Management

4.

Adam J. Strang, Consortium Research Fellows

Program; Sharon Horwood, Deakin U.; Christopher

Best, Defence Science and Techology Organiza tion; Gregory J. Funke, Benjamin A. Knott, and

Sheldon M. Russell, U.S. Air Force Research Lab,

Examining Temporal Regularity in Categori cal Team Communication Using Sample

Entropy

CE10 – COGNITION IN MODELING AND

DESIGN

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Michael Dorneich, Honeywell

1.

Ganyun Sun and Shengji Yao, U. of New Bruns wick, Investigating the Relation Between

Cog nitive Load and Creativity in the Concep tual Design Process

2.

Jennifer Tsai and Alex Kirlik, U. of Illinois at

Urbana-Champaign, Coherence and Corre spondence Competence: Implications for

Elicitation and Aggregation of Probabilistic

Forecasts of World Events

36 O C TO B E R 2 5 – T H U R S D AY

3.

Sarah M. Miller, Clifton Forlines, and John Regan,

C. S. Draper Lab, Exploring the Relationship

Between Topic Area Knowledge and Fore casting Performance

4.

Shi Cao and Yili Liu, U. of Michigan, An Inte grated Cognitive Architecture for Cognitive

Engineering Applications

5.

Leah Swanson, Eric Jones, Brian Riordan, Sylvain

Bruni, Nathan Schurr, Seamus Sullivan, and

Jonathan Lansey, Aptima, Inc., Exploring Human

Error in an RPA Target Detection Task

CE11 – INVESTIGATING THE COGNITION

OF LUGGAGE SCREENING

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Grand Ballroom C/D (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making; cosponsored by Perception & Performance

Chair: Lawrence Hettinger, Liberty Mutual Research

Inst. for Safety

1.

Biyun Zhu and Xianghong Sun, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Effects of Superposition on Oculo motor Guidance and Target Recognition

2.

Kimberly E. Culley and Poornima Madhavan, Old

Dominion U., Affect and Time Pressure in a

Simulated Luggage Screening Paradigm:

A Fuzzy Signal Detection Theory Analysis

3.

Molly Liechty and Poornima Madhavan, Old

Dominion U., Memory and Recognition of a

Nontarget During a Threat Detection Visual

Search Task

4.

Molly Liechty and Poornima Madhavan, Old

Dominion U., An Assessment of Spatial Con text on Eye Movement During a Visual Search

Task

5.

Rachel R. Phillips and Poornima Madhavan, Old

Dominion U., The Effect of Simulation Style on Performance

FP4 – FORENSIC ISSUES IN TRANSPORTA -

TION AND DISABILITIES

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Forensics Professional; cosponsored by Surface

Transportation

Chair: Jeffrey W. Muttart, Accident Dynamics

Research Ctr.; Cochair: Kenneth Nemire, HFE

Consulting

1.

Michael E. Maddox, Sisyphus Assoc., LLC;

Aaron Kiefer, Accident Research Specialists,

Looming Threshold Limits and Their Use in Forensic Practice

O C TO B E R 2 5 – T H U R S D AY

2.

Kurt W. Ising, Jason A. Droll, Shannon G. Kroeker,

Pamela M. D’Addario, and Jean-Francois Goulet,

MEA Forensic Engineers & Scientists, Driver-

Related Delay in Emergency Braking

Response to a Laterally Incurring Hazard

3.

Rudolf G. Mortimer, Consultant, How a Video

Record of a Driver’s Forward View Made a

Difference in the Human Factors Analysis of a Traffic Crash

4.

Rondell Burge and Alex Chaparro, Wichita State

U., The Effects of Texting and Driving on

Hazard Perception

5.

Alison G. Vredenburgh and Ilene B. Zackowitz,

Vredenburgh and Assoc., Inc., When Is a Dog

Just a Dog? A Case Study Evaluating the

ADA Service Animal Rules

HC8 – A WEALTH OF INFORMATION

CREATES A POVERTY OF ATTENTION?

UNDERSTANDING INFORMATION

REQUIRE MENTS FOR COMMUNICATION

AT HANDOVERS

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: Sarah Henrickson Parker, MedStar Inst. for

Innovation

Panelists: Robert L. Wears, U. of Florida; Michael

Cohen, U. of Michigan; John Carroll, Massa chusetts

Inst. of Technology; Shawna Perry, Virginia

Commonwealth U.; Tanja Manser, U. of Fribourg

HP3 – ERGONOMICS AND VISION

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Commonwealth A (Concourse Level)

Human Performance Modeling

Chair: Linda Ng Boyle, U. of Washington

1.

Xiaolu Zeng, Alan Hedge, and Francois

Guimbretiere, Cornell U., Fitts’ Law in 3-D

Space With Coordinated Hand Movements

2.

Hyungseok Oh and Rohae Myung, Korea U.,

Modeling Human Visual Processing Within and Beyond the Oculomotor Range Using

ACT-R Cognitive Architecture

3.

Yunfeng Zhang and Anthony J. Hornof, U. of

Oregon, A Discrete Movement Model For

Cursor Tracking Validated in the Context of a Dual-Task Experiment

4.

Evan William Patton and Wayne D. Gray,

Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst.; Bonnie E. John,

Interna tional Business Machines, Automated

CPM-GOMS Modeling from Human Data

Thursday

Oct. 25

37

Thursday

Oct. 25

5.

Tara Kajaks and James L. Lyons, McMaster U.,

Toward Bridging the Gap Between Bio mechanics and Motor Control for Virtual

Ergonomics Applications

IE4 – APPLICATIONS OF NIRS IN ERGO -

NOMICS AND HUMAN FACTORS

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Industrial Ergonomics

Chair: Rammohan Maikala, Liberty Mutual Research

Inst. for Safety; Cochair: Ranjana Mehta, Michigan

Technological U.

Panelists: Ranjana K. Mehta, Michigan Technological

U.; Sue A. Ferguson, Ohio State U.; Raja Parasuraman,

George Mason U.; Mark S. Redfern and April J.

Chambers, U. of Pittsburgh

PD4 – DESIGN PRACTICE

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Stone (Lobby Level)

Product Design

Chair: Barbara S. Chaparro, Wichita State U.; Cochair:

Hugh McLoone, T-Mobile

1.

Jo R. Jardina and Barbara S. Chaparro, Wichita

State U., Usability of e-Readers for Book

Navigation Tasks

2.

Jeremy M. Spaulding and Jeffrey Holt, Osram

Sylvania, Exploration of Gesture-Based Control for Tunable Solid-State Lighting Applications

3.

Dan Odell, Nokia Research Ctr.; Vasudha

Chandrasekaran, Microsoft, Enabling Comfor table Thumb Interaction in Tablet Computers:

A Windows 8 Case Study

4.

Baekhee Lee, Pohang U. of Science and Technol ogy; Yoon Chang, LG Electronics; Kihyo Jung, U.

of Ulsan; Ilho Jung, Hyundai Engineering;

Heecheon You, Pohang U. of Science and Tech nology, Ergonomic Design of a Main Control

Room of Radioactive Waste Facility Using

Digital Human Simulation

5.

Michael A. Rodriguez, Independent Consultant,

How (and When) to Make Hardware Design

Changes in Released Products

SD2 – SYSTEM DEVELOPMENT POTPOURRI

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Webster (Lobby Level)

System Development

Chair: Allison Popola, Naval Surface Warfare Ctr.;

Cochair: Patrick Mead, Naval Surface Warfare Ctr.

1.

Jamie C. Macbeth and M. L. Cummings, Massa chusetts Inst. of Technology; Luca F. Bertuccelli and Amit Surana, United Technologies Research

Ctr., Interface Design for Unmanned Vehicle

Supervision Through Hybrid Cognitive Task

Analysis

2.

Hans Jander and Jonathan Borgvall, Swedish

Defence Research Agency; Robert Ramberg,

Stockholm U., Toward a Methodological

Framework for HMI Readiness Evaluation

3.

Claudia V. Goldman and Asaf Degani, General

Motors R&D, A Team-Oriented Framework for Human-Automation Interaction: Implica tion for the Design of an Advanced Cruise

Control System

4.

Brigid Jacobs, MCR, LLC; Lee Ann Young,

Applied Research Assoc.; Howard Champion and

Mary Lawnick, SimQuest; Michael Galarneau and

Vern Wing, Naval Health Research Ctr.; William

Krebs, Office of Naval Research, Applying

Modeling and Simulation to Predict Human

Injury Due to a Blast Attack on a Shipboard

Environment

T4 – TRAINING APPLICATIONS IN NON-

STANDARD TRAINING ENVIRONMENTS

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Douglas (Mezzanine Level)

Training

Chair: Elizabeth Phillips, U. of Central Florida;

Cochair: Emily Wiese, Aptima, Inc.

1.

Robert Malony, Dahai Liu, and Dennis Vincenzi,

Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U., Using Discrete

Event Simulation as a Supplemental Teaching

Aid for Analyzing Staff Scheduling

2.

Sara E. McBride, Jenay M. Beer, Tracy L. Mitzner,

Jennifer M. Springman, and Wendy A. Rogers,

Georgia Inst. of Technology, Challenges of

Training Older Adults in a Home Health

Care Context

38 O C TO B E R 2 5 – T H U R S D AY

3.

Robert S. Gutzwiller and Benjamin A. Clegg,

Colorado State U., Training for Unmanned

Vehicle Allocation With Automation in a

Dynamic Microworld

4.

Patricia L. McDermott, Thomas Carolan, and

Christopher D. Wickens, Alion Science and Technology, Part-Task Training Methods in Simu lated and Realistic Tasks

5.

Rob Mayer, Brandon Moeller, Vince Kaliwata,

Ben Zweber, Richard Stone, and Matt Frank,

Iowa State U., Educating Engineering Under graduates: Effects of Scaffolding in a Problem-

Based Learning Environment

Thursday, October 25

1:30–3:00 p.m.

AS6 – METHODOLOGIES FOR THE DESIGN

OF FUTURE AVIATION SYSTEMS

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Aerospace Systems

Chair: Michelle Harper, Aptima Inc.; Cochair: Linda

Pierce, Federal Aviation Admin.

1.

Alicia Borgman Fernandes, Philip J. Smith,

Kristen Weaver, Ken Durham, and Mark Evans,

Ohio State U.; Dustin Johnson, AMT Machine

Systems, Identifying Support Requirements for Airport Departure Management

2.

Kathleen Mosier, San Francisco State U.; Ute

Fischer, Francis T. Durso, Karen Feigh, Vlad Pop, and Katlyn Sullivan, Georgia Inst. of Technology;

Dan Morrow, U. of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign,

I mpact of Automation, Task, and Context

Features on Pilots’ Perception of Human-

Automation Interaction

3.

Michael C. Dorneich, William Rogers, Stephen D.

Whitlow, and Robert De Mers, Honeywell,

Analysis of the Risks and Benefits of Flight

Deck Adaptive Systems

4.

Jennie J. Gallimore, Steven Brent Kiss, Ricardo

Danny Munoz, Chang-Geun Oh, Randall Green,

Timothy Crory, Clark Shingledecker, and Pamela

S. Tsang, Wright State U.; Dan Herschler, Federal

Aviation Admin., Method for Evaluating Data

Communication Messages in NextGen Flight

Deck Scenarios

5.

Christopher K. Mcclernon, U.S. Air Force Research

Lab; James C. Miller, Miller Ergonomics; James C.

Christensen, U.S. Air Force Research Lab, Vari ance as a Method for Objectively Assessing

Pilot Performance

O C TO B E R 2 5 – T H U R S D AY

CE12 – NEW APPROACHES TO ANALYZING

WORK

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Maia Cook, Pacific Science & Engineering

Group

1.

M. L. Cummings, Massachusetts Inst. of Tech nology; Jackie Tappan, GE Energy; Christine

Mikkelsen, ABB Corporate Research, One Work

Analysis, Two Domains: A Display Informa tion Requirements Case Study

2.

Miranda Cornelissen, Paul M. Salmon, and

Roderick McClure, Monash U.; Neville A. Stanton,

U. of Southampton, What Are They Doing:

Testing a Structured Cognitive Work Analysis-

Based Approach for Identifying Different

Road User Strategies

3.

Gemma J. M. Read, Paul M. Salmon, and

Michael G. Lenne, Monash Injury Research Inst.,

From Work Analysis to Work Design: A

Review of Cognitive Work Analysis Design

Applications

4.

Tania Xiao, Sustainable Minerals Inst.; Penelope

M. Sanderson, U. of Queensland, Developing and

Evaluating the Organizational Con straints

Analysis (OCA) Approach to Analyzing Work

Coordination via Resource Allocation Case

Studies

5.

Antony Hilliard, U. of Toronto, Applying Work

Domain Analysis to Scope Micro- or Scaled-

World Simulator Design: A Petrochemical

Domain Case Study

Thursday

Oct. 25

GS9 – THE OPERATIONAL CONTEXT OF

PROCEDURES AND CHECKLISTS IN COM -

MERCIAL AVIATION

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom C/D (Concourse Level)

General Sessions

Chair: Immanuel Barshi, NASA Ames Research Ctr.

Panelists: Robert Mauro, Decision Research; Asaf

Degani, GM Advance Technical Ctr., Israel; Loukia

Loukopoulos, San Jose State U.

39

Thursday

Oct. 25

HC9 – HANDOFF COMMUNICATION:

IMPLICATIONS FOR DESIGN

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: Ayse Gurses, Johns Hopkins U.

Panelists: Priyadarshini R. Pennathur, Johns Hopkins U.;

Ellen J. Bass, U. of Virginia; Michael F. Rayo, Ohio

State U.; Shawna J. Perry, Virginia Commonwealth U.;

Michael Rosen, Johns Hopkins U.

HC10 – SAFETY & FATIGUE

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: Rollin J. “Terry” Fairbanks, MedStar Inst. for

Innovation; Cochair: Alissa Russ, U.S. Department of

Veterans Affairs

1.

Christen Lopez and Laura G. Militello, Applied

Decision Science, LLC; William S. Brown, Brook haven National Lab; John Wreathall, John

Wreathall and Co., Inc.; Julie Marble and Susan E.

Cooper, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission,

Using Incident Reports to Identify Vulner abil ities: A Case Study in Radiation Therapy

2.

Laura H. Barg-Walkow, Daniel R. Walsh, and

Wendy A. Rogers, Georgia Inst. of Technology,

Understanding Use Errors for Medical De vices: Analysis of the MAUDE Database

3.

Rossini Ying Kwan Yue, Patricia Trbovich, and

Tony Easty, U. of Toronto, A Healthcare Fail ure Mode and Effect Analysis on the Safety of Secondary Infusions

4.

Linsey M. Steege, Suzanne A. Boren, Douglas S.

Wakefield, Stephanie Reid-Arndt, and Stephen L.

Barnes, U. of Missouri, Strategies for Coping

With Fatigue: A Pilot Study of Medical and

Surgical Residents

5.

Alan Hedge, Cornell U.; Tamara James, Duke U.

Medical Ctr., Gender Effects on Musculoskele tal Symptoms Among Physician Computer

Users in Outpatient Diagnostic Clinics

6.

Jakeb D. Riggle, U. of Nebraska Medical Ctr.;

Bernadette McCrory, U. of Nebraska-Lincoln;

Michael C. Wadman, U. of Nebraska Medical

Ctr.; Emily Miller, Bobbi Balogh, Vincent Cao,

Catherine Sargus, and M. Susan Hallbeck, U. of Nebraska–Lincoln, Comparison of Muscle

Exertion and Fatigue Between Standard

Bag Valve Mask and NuMask

ID4 – INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES: MODELS

AND METHODS FOR PREDICTION

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Commonwealth A (Concourse Level)

Individual Differences

Chair: Krystyna Gielo-Perczak, U. of Connecticut;

Cochair: Grace Teo, U. of Central Florida

1.

Nirathi Keerthi Govindu and Kari Babski-Reeves,

Mississippi State U., I nvestigating Individual and Occupational Factors and Their Interac tions on Low Back Pain Severity in Workers

2.

Bonny Parke, San Jose State U.; Judith Orasanu,

NASA Ames Research Ctr., Portraying the Con tribution of Individual Behaviors to Team

Cohesion and Performance

3.

Joshua C. Poore, John Regan, Sarah Miller, Cliff

Forlines, and John Irvine, Charles Stark Draper

Lab, Fine Distinctions Within Cognitive Style

Predict Forecasting Accuracy

4.

Andrew R. Dattel, Jason E. Vogt, Chelsea C.

Sheehan, Kristen Majdic, Matthew C. Stefonetti,

Marissa C. Miller, Daniel P. Dever, Jesse Brodsky,

Sierra Bradley, and Jessica Fratzola, Marywood U.,

The Effects of Pointing Out Failures of In attentional Blindness on Performance and

Situation Awareness

5.

Ivonne J. Figueroa, California State U., Northridge;

Robert J. Youmans, George Mason U., Individual

Differences in Cognitive Flexibility Predict

Performance in Vigilance Tasks

IE5 – ASSESSMENT OF UPPER EXTREMITY

MUSCULOSKELETAL DISORDERS

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Industrial Ergonomics

Chair: Victor Paquet, U. at Buffalo, SUNY; Cochair:

Julie Gilpin-McMinn, Spirit AeroSystems

1.

Susan Burt, National Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, A Prospective Study of Carpal

Tunnel Syndrome: Workplace and Individual

Risk Factors

2.

D. Christian Grieshaber, Illinois State U.;

Matthew M. Marshall, Rochester Inst. of Tech nology; Thomas J. Fuller, Illinois State U., Symp toms of Musculoskeletal Disorders Among

Tattoo Artists

3.

Lenore T. Page, Montana State U., Licensed

Massage Therapist Strain Index Scores

40 O C TO B E R 2 5 – T H U R S D AY

4.

Fereydoun Aghazadeh, Saif Al-Qaisi, Laura Ikuma, and Francis Hutchinson, Louisiana State U.,

Valve Operation: Evaluation of Handwheel

Actuation Techniques in Terms of Muscle

Loading, Perceived Comfort, and Efficiency

5.

Shaheen Ahmed and Kari Babski-Reeves, Mis sis sippi State U., Assessment of Upper Extremity

Postures in Novice and Expert During Simu lated Carpentry Tasks

PD5 – PRODUCT DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Stone (Lobby Level)

Product Design

Chair: James A. Kleiss, GE; Cochair: Danielle Lottridge,

Stanford U.

1.

Takeyoshi Kaminishizono and Sakiko Sakai,

Niigata U. of International and Information

Studies, Preliminary Research to Decrease

Splashing Mud During Walking

2.

Wonsup Lee and Jangwoon Park, Pohang U. of

Science and Technology; Jeongrim Jeong, Lough borough U.; Eunjin Jeon, Pohang U. of Science and

Technology; Hee-Eun Kim, Kyungpook National

U.; Seikwon Park, Korea Air Force Academy;

Heecheon You, Pohang U. of Science and Tech nol ogy, Analysis of the Facial Anthropomet ric

Data of Korean Pilots for Oxygen Mask

Design

3.

Bethany R. Lowndes, Elizabeth A. Thrailkill, and

M. Susan Hallbeck, U. of Nebraska-Lincoln,

Hand Actuation Strength: A Preliminary

Evaluation of Physical Demand in a Nontra di tional Lawn-Mowing Control System

4.

Curt B. Irwin, Rafael A. Farfan, and Craig P.

Conner, Design Concepts, Inc., Physiological

Impact of Hospital Cleaning Carts on Clean ing Staff

PP6 – DESIGN OF CONTROLS

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Otis (Lobby Level)

Perception & Performance

Chair: Meike Jipp, German Aerospace Ctr.

1.

Jing Chen and Robert W. Proctor, Purdue U.,

Up or Down: Directional Stimulus-Response

Compatibility and Natural Scrolling

2.

Michael J. Crites and Jamie C. Gorman, Texas

Tech U., Are Two Hands (From Different

People) Better Than One? Transfer Between

Unimanual, Bimanual, and Intermanual

Coordination Modes

3.

Erik Prytz, Michael Montano, and Mark W. Scerbo,

Old Dominion U., Using Fitts’ Law for a 3-D

Pointing Task on a 2-D Display: Effects of

Depth and Vantage Point

4.

Daecheol Park and Rohae Myung, Korea U.,

Prediction of a Three-Dimensional Pointing

Task Through Extending the Motor Module of ACT-R

5.

Moin Rahman, HVHF Sciences, LLC.,

Direct Perception-Action Coupling: A Neo-

Gibsonian Model for Critical Human-Machine

Interactions Under Stress

S4 – TEST & EVALUATION: SAFETY ALERTS,

FALL PREVENTION, NUCLEAR POWER

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Douglas (Mezzanine Level)

Safety

Chair: Nancy Daraiseh, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital

Medical Ctr.; Cochair: William J. Vigilante, Robson

Forensic, Inc.

1.

Hunter D. Kopald, Elida C. Smith, and Ronald K.

Stevens, The MITRE Corp., Controller

Response Times to Surface Safety Alerts

2.

Emilia Duarte, IADE-Inst. of Visual Arts, Design and Marketing; Francisco Rebelo and Júlia Teles,

Technical U. of Lisbon; Michael S. Wogalter,

North Carolina State U., A Personalized Speech

Warning Facilitates Compliance in an Immer sive Virtual Environment

3.

Ronald Laurids Boring, Idaho National Lab, Overview of a Reconfigurable Simulator for Main

Control Room Upgrades in Nuclear Power

Plants

4.

Justin Young, Kettering U.; Peter Ehrlich, Sheryl

Ulin, Chuck Woolley, Thomas Armstrong, Andrzej

Galecki, and James Ashton-Miller, U. of Michigan,

Effects of Gender and Hand Dominance on

Children’s Capacity to Hang Onto an Over head Rung With One Hand

5.

Joseph Angles, Gabrielle Trochez, Akiko Nakata,

Tonya Smith-Jackson, and Daniel Hindman, Vir ginia Polytechnic Inst. and State U., Application of Scaled World Model for Usability Testing of Fall Arrest System in Residential Con struction

Thursday

Oct. 25

O C TO B E R 2 5 – T H U R S D AY 41

Thursday

Oct. 25

SF5 – ATTENTION AND MEMORY

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom II (Conference Level)

Student Forum

Chair: Richard T. Stone, Iowa State U.; Cochair:

Veronica E. Scerra, Old Dominion U.

1.

Nicole L. Fink, Meghan Goodwin, Spencer Kohn,

Reginald Wideman, Margaux Price, and Richard

Pak, Clemson U., How Is Prospective Memory

Used to Complete Instrumental Activities of

Daily Living? Examining the Topic Through

Focus Groups With Older Adults: Pilot Results

2.

Brock M. Bass and Richard Pak, Clemson U.,

Faces as Ambient Displays: Assessing the

Attention-Demanding Characteristics of

Facial Expressions

3.

David Sharek and Eric Wiebe, North Carolina

State U., Embedding Secondary Tasks in

Video Games to Measure Real-Time Cogni tive Load: An Approach to Developing

Adaptive Video Games

4.

Spencer C. Kohn, Nicole P. Fink, and Richard

Pak, Clemson U.; Anne Collins McLaughlin,

North Carolina State U., Examining the Effects of Cue Valence and Attention Load on Pro spective Memory

5.

Nicole Lee Fink, Meghan Goodwin, Nicholas

Jewell, Spencer Kohn, and Richard Pak, Clemson

U., Examining the Picture Superiority Effect in Prospective Memory, Including the Factors of Age and Attention Load

ST5 – DRIVER ATTITUDES TOWARD

MONITORING AND PERSPECTIVES ON

AUTOMATION

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 1:30–3:00 p.m.

Webster (Lobby Level)

Surface Transportation

Chair: Myra Blanco, Virginia Tech Transportation

Inst.; Cochair: Shannon C. Roberts, U. of Wisconsin-

Madison

1.

Yiyun Peng, U. of Washington; Mahtab

Ghazizadeh, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Linda Ng

Boyle, U. of Washington; John D. Lee, U. of

Wisconsin-Madison, Commercial Drivers’ Initial

Attitudes Toward an On-Board Monitoring

System

2.

Mahtab Ghazizadeh, U. of Wisconsin-Madison;

Yiyun Peng, U. of Washington; John D. Lee, U.

of Wisconsin-Madison; Linda Ng Boyle, U. of

Washington, Augmenting the Technology

Acceptance Model With Trust: Commercial

42

Drivers’ Attitudes Toward Monitoring and

Feedback

3.

Patrick Stahl, Birsen Donmez, and Greg A.

Jamieson, U. of Toronto, Analysis of the Inter action Between Human Operator and Auto mated Dispatch in Haul Truck Scheduling

4.

M. Saffarian, U. of Toronto; J. C. F. de Winter and

R. Happee, Delft U. of Technology, Automated

Driving: Human Factors Issues and Design

Solutions

5.

Thomas Ayres; Tate Kubose, InSciTech,

Speed and Accuracy in Driver Emergency

Avoidance

Thursday, October 25

3:30–5:00 p.m.

CE13 – COGNITIVE ENGINEERING FOR

TEAMS

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Rebecca Grier, Institute for Defense Analysis

1.

Avi Parush and Chunyun Ma, Carleton U., Team

Displays Work, Particularly With Communi cation Breakdown: Performance and Situa tion Awareness in a Simulated Forest Fire

2.

Vincent F. Mancuso and Michael D. McNeese,

Pennsylvania State U., Effects of Integrated and Differentiated Team Knowledge Struc tures on Distributed Team Cognition

3.

Meshael Alqahtani and Jonathan M. Histon, U. of Waterloo, Improving the Management of

Interruption Through the Working Aware ness Interruption Tool: WAIT

4.

Shannon Fouse, Michael Champion, and Nancy J.

Cooke, Arizona State U., The Effects of Vehicle

Number and Function on Performance and

Workload in Human-Robot Teaming

5.

Nina Gross and Annette Kluge, U. of Duisburg-

Essen, “Why Should I Share What I Know?”

Antecedents for Enhancing Knowledge-

Shar ing Behavior and Its Impact on Shared

Mental Models in Steel Production

O C TO B E R 2 5 – T H U R S D AY

E4 – EXPECTATIONS FOR FUTURE HF/E

PROGRAMS

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Douglas (Mezzanine Level)

Education

Chair: Jamie Gorman, Texas Tech U.; Cochair: John

Ruffner, Serco, Inc.

1.

William F. Moroney, U. of Dayton; Esa M.

Rantanen, Rochester Inst. of Technology,

Student Perceptions of Their Educational and Skill Needs in the Workplace

2.

Esa M. Rantanen, Rochester Inst. of Technology;

William F. Moroney, U. of Dayton, Employers’

Expectations for Education and Skills of New

Human Factors/Ergonomics Professionals

3.

Andris Freivalds, Pennsylvania State U.; Myung

Hwan Yun, Seoul National U., Multimedia

Global Human Factors Distance Education

4.

Adam Emfield, U. of Central Florida, Guidelines for a Successful Student Chapter

HC11 – HUMAN FACTORS IN THE WILD:

DILEMMAS AND SOLUTIONS FROM

HUMAN FACTORS ENGINEERS WORKING

IN HEALTH CARE

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: Rollin J. “Terry” Fairbanks, MedStar Inst. for

Innovation

Panelists: Yan Xiao, Baylor Health Care System; Laurie

Wolf, Barnes-Jewish Hospital; Peter Doyle, Johns Hop kins Hospital; Anjum Chagpar, University Health Net work, Toronto; Jason Kumagai, Alberta Health Services

HC12 – ERGONOMIC ASPECTS OF CLINICAL

AND SURGICAL PROCEDURES

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: Thomas J. Armstrong, U. of Michigan

Panelists: F. Jacob Seagull, U. of Michigan; Amandeep

Shergill, U. of California, San Francisco; Caroline G. L.

Cao, Wright State U.; M. Susan Hallbeck, U. of

Nebraska-Lincoln

HP4 – MODELING SUPERVISORY CONTROL,

EMOTION, TRAINING, AND COGNITION

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 3:30-5:00 p.m.

Commonwealth A (Concourse Level)

Human Performance Modeling

Chair: Angelia Sebok, Alion Science & Technology

Corp.

1.

Shi Cao and Yili Liu, U. of Michigan, QN-ACTR

Modeling of Multitask Performance of

Dynam ic and Complex Cognitive Tasks

2.

Sungjin Park and Rohae Myung, Korea U., A

Con ceptual Framework for Emotional Re sponse of Product With ACT-R Cognitive

Architecture

3.

Daniel Gartenberg, George Mason U.; Leonard

A. Breslow, Naval Research Lab; J. Malcolm

McCurry, ITT Exelis; J. Gregory Trafton, Naval

Research Lab, Time Pressure, Memory, and

Task Knowledge Facilitate the Opportunism

Heuristic in Dynamic Tasks

4.

Hong Jiang, Waldemar Karwowski, and Tareq

Ahram, U. of Central Florida, Application of Sys tem Dynamics Modeling for the Assessment of Training Performance Effectiveness

5.

Kelly S. Steelman and Jason S. McCarley, Flinders

U., Modeling Violations of Indepen dent

Sampling in a Supervisory Monitoring Task

Thursday

Oct. 25

IE6 – LIFTING, MATERIAL HANDLING, AND

LOW BACK ASSESSMENT METHODS

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Industrial Ergonomics

Chair: Fadi A. Fathallah, U. California, Davis; Cochair:

Chien-Chi Chang, Liberty Mutual Research Ctr.

1.

Sruthi Boda, Arun Garg, and Naira Campbell-

Kyureghyan, U. of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Can the Revised NIOSH Lifting Equation Predict

Low Back Pain Incidence in a “90-Day-Pain-

Free” Cohort?

2.

James G. Borchardt, Bituminous Insurance Co.;

Sang D. Choi, U. of Wisconsin-Whitewater,

B Factor and Its Importance to HFE

Practitioners—Applying NIOSH’s 1991

Revised Lifting Equation and Its Derivatives

3.

Oscar E. Arias, Peter E. Umukuro, Sonja Stoffel,

Jack T. Dennerlein, and Glorian Sorensen, Harvard

School of Public Health, Association Between

Trunk Flexion and Physical Activity in

Patient Care Unit Workers

O C TO B E R 2 5 – T H U R S D AY 43

Thursday

Oct. 25

4.

Patrick J. Lee, Ellen L. Lee, and Wilson C. Hayes,

Hayes+Assoc., Inc., Biomechanical Trade-Offs in Manual Material Handling: Some Tasks

Reduce Lumbar Loading But Increase

Thoracic Loading

5.

Danny Nou, Brandon J. Miller, and Fadi A.

Fathallah, U. of California, Davis, Low Back

Muscle Fatigue Measurements of Cyclic and

Prolonged Stooped Work

ME2 – MACROERGONOMICS IN HEALTH

CARE: PRINCIPLES, PROGRESS, AND

PROSPECTS

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom I (Conference Level)

Macroergonomics; consponsored by Health Care

Chair: Richard J. Holden, Vanderbilt U.; Cochair: Enid

Montague, U. of Wisconsin-Madison

Panelists: Enid Montague, Pascale Carayon, and Peter

Hoonakker, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Patrick Waterson,

Lough borough U.; Tosha Wetterneck, U. of Wisconsin-

Madison; Ayse Gurses, Johns Hopkins U.; A. Joy

Rivera-Rodriguez, Clemson U.

PD6 – PRODUCT DESIGN AND EMOTION

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Stone (Lobby Level)

Product Design

Chair: Hugh McLoone, T-Mobile; Cochair: Ravindra

Goonetilleke, Hong Kong U. of Science and Tech nology

Panelists: Melissa Jacobson, 56seven8 design; Ravindra

S. Goonetilleke, Hong Kong U. of Science and Tech nology; James Kleiss, GE Healthcare; Yili Liu, U. of

Michigan; Simon Schütte, Linköping U.

PP7 – DEVELOPING & MEASURING

EXPERTISE

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Otis (Lobby Level)

Perception & Performance

Chair: Jocelyn Keillor, NRC Aerospace; Cochair:

Huiyang Li, U. of Michigan

1.

Ji Hyun Yang, Quinn Kennedy, Joseph Sullivan, and Ronald D. Fricker, Jr., Naval Postgraduate

School, Scan Patterns on Overland Naviga tion in Varying Route Difficulty: Is Total-Flight-

Hours (TFH) a Good Measure of Expertise?

2.

Melissa R. Beck, Louisiana State U.; Michael

Trenchard, Naval Research Lab; Amanda van

Lamsweerde and Rebecca R. Goldstein, Louisi ana

State U.; Maura Lohrenz, Volpe National Trans portation Systems Ctr., Searching in Clutter:

Visual Attention Strategies of Expert Pilots

3.

Christopher Brown, Robert May, Jeremiah Nyman, and Evan M. Palmer, Wichita State U., Effects of Friend vs. Foe Discrimination Training in

Action Video Games

4.

Grace W. Teo, Tarah N. Schmidt, James L. Szalma,

Gabriella M. Hancock, and Peter A. Hancock, U.

of Central Florida, The Effect of Knowledge of Results for Training Vigilance in a Video

Game-Based Environment

5.

Ryan McKendrick and Raja Parasuraman, George

Mason U., Effects of Different Types of Vari able Priority and Adaptive Training on Skill

Acquisition in Dual Verbal-Spatial Working

Memory Tasks

PP8 – MULTIMODAL CUEING: THE RELATIVE

BENEFITS OF THE AUDITORY, VISUAL, AND

TACTILE CHANNELS

Discussion Panel

Thursday, October 25, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Grand Ballroom C/D (Concourse Level)

Perception & Performance; cosponsored by

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Carryl Baldwin, George Mason U.; Cochair:

Bridget Lewis, George Mason U.

Panelists: Charles Spence, U. of Oxford; James P. Bliss and J. Christopher Brill, Old Dominion U.; Michael S.

Wogalter and Christopher B. Mayhorn, North Carolina

State U.; Thomas K. Ferris, Texas A&M U.

SF6 – STUDENT RESEARCH POTPOURRI

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Harbor Ballroom II (Conference Level)

Student Forum

Chair: Frank Lacson, Pacific Science & Engineering

Group; Cochair: Ben D. Sawyer, U. of Central Florida

1.

Scott Richard Winter, Jennifer E. Kirschner,

Steven M. Leib, and Richard O. Fanjoy, Purdue

U., Perceptions of Instructors on Student

Training in a Jet Aircraft: A Preliminary

Qualitative Analysis

2.

Thomas Alicia, NAWCTSD, Utilizing a Phased

Technique to Mitigate the Modality Shifting

Effect: An Initial Examination

44 O C TO B E R 2 5 – T H U R S D AY

3.

Stuart Austin Ragsdale, Roger Lew, and Brian P.

Dyre, U. of Idaho; Ronald Laurids Boring, Idaho

National Lab, Fault Diagnosis With Multistate

Alarms in a Nuclear Power Control Simulator

4.

Ashley E. Shortz, Sarah Van Dyke, and Ranjana

K. Mehta, Michigan Technological U., Neural

Correlates of Physical and Mental Fatigue

5.

James Nathaniel Salley, Jenna L. Scisco, Eric R.

Muth, and Adam Hoover, Clemson U., A Com parison of User Preferences and Reported

Compliance With the Bite Counter and the

24-Hour Dietary Recall

VE3 – VIRTUAL REALITY, VIRTUAL

HUMANS, AND ROBOTS

Lecture

Thursday, October 25, 3:30–5:00 p.m.

Webster (Lobby Level)

Virtual Environments

Chair: Hari Thiruvengada, Honeywell; Cochair: Jurate

Liutvinskaite, U. of Central Florida

1.

Kiwon Yeom, Stephen R. Ellis, and Bernard D.

Adelstein, NASA Ames Research Ctr., Discon tin uity Detection Algorithm for Three-

Dimensional Trajectory Data Analysis in

Telerobotics

2.

Bora Kang, Donghun Lee, and Min K. Chung,

Pohang U. of Science and Technology; Gyouhyung

Kyung and Kyunghyun Nam, Ulsan National Inst.

of Science and Technology, A Method to Create

Dynamic Motions of Digital Human Models and a Case Study

3.

Adam Goetz, Joseph R. Keebler, Elizabeth K.

Phillips, Florian Jentsch, and Irwin Hudson, U. of

Central Florida, Evaluation of COTS Simula tions for Future HRI Teams

4.

Heather A. Priest, U.S. Army Research Inst.; Sally

Stader, Consortium Research Fellows Program,

A Framework for Developing Synthetic

Agents as Pedagogical Teammates: Applying

What We Already Know

5.

Marvick Burgos, North Carolina State U.;

Rosemarie E. Yagoda, U.S. Navy NAVSEA,

Robots, Emotions, and Appearances: Look at Me Now

Thursday, October 25

5:15–6:30 p.m.

Technical Group Networking/

Business Meeting

Technical Group Program Chairs

5:15–6:30 p.m.

Adams (Mezzanine Level)

Friday, October 26

8:30–10:00 a.m.

CE14 – CONTROL OF MULTIPLE UAVS

Lecture

Friday, October 26, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making; cosponsored by Aerospace Systems

Chair: David Zeltzer, Solidus Technical Systems

1.

Maia B. Cook, Harvey S. Smallman, Frank C.

Lacson, and Daniel I. Manes, Pacific Science &

Engineering Group, Guided Attention for

Autonomous System Supervision

2.

Gloria L. Calhoun, U.S. Air Force Research Lab;

Heath A. Ruff, Ball Aerospace & Technology

Corp.; Sarah Spriggs and Crystal Murray, U.S. Air

Force Research Lab, Tailored Performance-

Based Adaptive Levels of Automation

3.

Kelly Neville, Beth Blickensderfer, Julian Archer,

Katherine Kaste, and Stephen P. Luxion, Embry-

Riddle Aeronautical U., A Cognitive Work

Analysis to Identify Human-Machine Inter face Design Challenges Unique to Uninhabited

Aircraft Systems

4.

Julie Clemence Prinet, Andrew Terhune, and

Nadine Barbara Sarter, U. of Michigan, Support ing Dynamic Replanning in Multiple UAV

Control: A Comparison of Three Levels of

Auto mation

5.

Brian D. Kidwell, George Mason U.; Gloria L.

Calhoun, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Heath A.

Ruff, Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp.; Raja

Parasuraman, George Mason U., Adaptable and

Adaptive Automation for Supervisory Con trol of Multiple Autonomous Vehicles

Friday

Oct. 26

O C TO B E R 2 5 – F R I D AY 45

Friday

Oct. 26

CE15 – EXPLORING COGNITIVE READINESS

IN COMPLEX OPERATIONAL ENVIRON -

MENTS: ADVANCES IN THEORY AND

PRACTICE

Invited Symposium

Friday, October 26, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Commonwealth B/C (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Haydee Cuevas, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.

1.

Haydee M. Cuevas, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical

U.; Dylan D. Schmorrow, Office of the Secretary of Defense, Exploring Cognitive Readiness in Complex Operational Environments: Ad vances in Theory and Practice

2.

Rebecca A. Grier, J.D. Fletcher, and John E.

Morrison, Inst. for Defense Analyses, Defining and Measuring Military Cognitive Readiness

3.

Laura D. Strater, SA Technologies, Inc.; Haydee

M. Cuevas, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical U.; Cheryl

Bolstad, Anthony Costello, and Sandro Scielzo,

SA Technologies, Inc., Promoting Individual and Team Cognitive Readiness in Complex

Domains

4.

Alexander D. Walker, Zachary N. J. Horn, and

Camilla C. Knott, Aptima, Inc., Cognitive

Readiness: The Need for a Multimodal

Measurement Approach

5.

Stephen M. Fiore, U. of Central Florida; Michael

A. Rosen, Johns Hopkins; Davin Pavlas, Riot

Games; Florian Jentsch, U. of Central Florida,

Conceptualizing Cognition at Multiple Levels in Support of Training Team Cognitive Readi ness

HC13 – LITERACY & SPECIAL

POPULATIONS

Lecture

Friday, October 26, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: Marita O’Brien, U. of Alabama-Huntsville;

Cochair: David Eibling, U. of Pittsburgh

1.

Nicole B. Percival, Aimee Pearson, Jessica Jones,

Matthew Wilkins, and Jeff K. Caird, U. of Calgary,

Ease of Use of Automated External Defibril lators (AEDs) by Older Adults

2.

Arathi Sethumadhavan, Medtronic, Inc.; Laura

Dove, Mathworks, One Size Does Not Fit All:

Health Care Human Factors When Design ing for an Emerging Market

3.

Yusuke Yamani, Jessie Chin, Elise A.G. Meyers,

Xuefei Gao, Daniel G. Morrow, and Elizabeth A. L.

Stine-Morrow, U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign;

Thembi Conner-Garcia and James F. Graumlich,

U. of Illinois College of Medicine; Michael D.

Murray, Regenstrief Inst., Reading Engagement

Offsets Declines in Processing Capacity for

Health Literacy

4.

Kapil Chalil Madathil, Reshmi Koikkara, Melissa

Dorlette-Paul, Sanjay Ranganayakulu, Joel S.

Greenstein, and Anand K. Gramopadhye, Clemson

U., An Investigation of Format Modifications on the Comprehension of Information in Con sent Form When Presented on Mobile Devices

5.

Gregg C. Vanderheiden, U. of Wisconsin-Madison;

Jutta Treviranus, OCAD U.; Jose A. Martinez

Usero, Technosite; Evangelos Bekiaris, Hellenic

Inst. of Transport; Maria Gemou, Centre for

Research and Technology Hellas; Amrish O.

Chourasia, U. of Wisconsin-Madison, Auto-

Personalization: Theory, Practice, and

Cross-Platform Implementation

HC14 – LEARNING ABOUT HEALTH CARE:

PREPARING HUMAN FACTORS PROFES -

SIONALS FOR A CAREER IN HEALTH CARE

Discussion Panel

Friday, October 26, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Grand Ballroom C/D (Concourse Level)

Health Care

Chair: Yan Xiao, Baylor Health Care System

Panelists: Adam Probst, Baylor Health Care System;

Alissa L. Russ, Roudebush VA Medical Ctr.; Pascale

Carayon, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Laurie Wolf,

Barnes Jewish Hospital; Sarah Henrickson Parker,

National Ctr. for Human Factors Engineering in Health

Care; Meghan M. Dierks, Harvard Medical School

IE7 – ERGONOMIC ASSESSMENT METHODS

Lecture

Friday, October 26, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Webster (Lobby Level)

Industrial Ergonomics

Chair: Richard Marklin, Marquette U.; Cochair:

Richard J. Gardner, Boeing Co.

1.

Ehsan Rashedi, Bochen Jia, Maury A. Nussbaum, and Thurmon E. Lockhart, Virginia Polytechnic

Inst. and State U., Investigating the Effects of

Slipping on Lumbar Muscle Activity, Kine matics, and Kinetics

2.

Bianca Bain and Richard Marklin, Marquette U.,

An Inside Step in an Aerial Bucket Reduces

Postural Instability During Ingress and Egress

46 O C TO B E R 2 5 – F R I D AY

3.

Steven A. Lavender and Jay P. Mehta, Ohio State

U.; Glenn E. Hedman, U. of Illinois at Chicago;

Sanghyun Park, Ohio State U.; Paul A. Reichelt and Karen M. Conrad, U. of Illinois at Chicago,

Ergonomic Evaluation of Track-Type Stair

Descent Devices Used for the Evacuation of

High Rise Buildings

4.

Patrick G. Dempsey, William L. Porter, and

Jonisha P. Pollard, National Inst. for Occupational

Safety & Health; Colin G. Drury, U. at Buffalo,

Using Multiple Complementary Methods to

Develop Ergonomics Audits for Mining

Operations

5.

Ornwipa Thamsuwan, Ryan P. Blood, Charlotte

Lewis, Patrik W. Rynell, and Peter W. Johnson,

U. of Washington, Whole-Body Vibration

Exposure and Seat Effective Amplitude

Transmissibility of Air Suspension Seat in

Different Bus Designs

PD7 – SOFTWARE DESIGN USABILITY

Lecture

Friday, October 26, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Product Design

Chair: M. Susan Hallbeck, U. of Nebraska

1.

Christian Gonzalez, Stephanie M. Pratt, and

William Benson, George Mason U.; Ivonne J.

Figueroa, California State U., Northridge; Dustin

Rhodes, U. of California, Santa Cruz; Robert J.

Youmans, George Mason U., Creating a Com puterized Assessment of Cognitive Flexibility

With a User-Friendly Participant and Experi menter Interface

2.

Danielle Lottridge, Stanford U.; Catherine Yu, St.

Michael’s Hospital; Mark Chignell, U. of Toronto,

Measuring the Emotional Impacts of Multi media eHealth

3.

Gurjot Singh Dhillon, Yasmine Nader Mohamed

El-Glaly, William H. Holbach, Tonya L. Smith-

Jackson, and Francis Quek, Virginia Polytechnic

Inst. and State U., Use of Participatory Design to Enhance Accessibility of Slate-Type Devices

4.

Danielle Lottridge, Eli Marschner, Ellen Wang,

Maria Romanovsky, and Clifford Nass, Stanford

U., Browser Design Impacts Multitasking

5.

Dan Nathan-Roberts, U. of Wisconsin-Madison;

Yili Liu, U. of Michigan, Integrating Aesthetic and Usability Factors in the Design of Mobile

Phones

PP9 – RESEARCH ON SUSTAINED

ATTENTION AND WORKLOAD

Lecture

Friday, October 26, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Perception & Performance

Chair: Joel S. Warm, U.S. Air Force Research Lab;

Cochair: Sehchang Hah, Federal Aviation Admin.

1.

Gregory Funke and Matthew Funke, U.S. Air

Force Research Lab; Michael Dillard, National

Research Council Research Associateship Pro gram; Victor Finomore, U.S. Air Force Research

Lab; Tyler Shaw, George Mason U.; Samantha

Epling, Ball Aerospace and Technologies Corp.;

Joel S. Warm, U.S. Air Force Research Lab; Raja

Parasuraman, George Mason U., Cerebral

Hemo velocity and the Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART)

2.

Armen A. Mkrtchyan, Jamie C. Macbeth, Erin T.

Solovey, Jason C. Ryan, and M. L. Cummings,

Massachusetts Inst. of Technology, Using

Variable-Rate Alerting to Counter Boredom in Human Supervisory Control

3.

Thomas R. Carretta and Guy A. French, U.S. Air

Force Research Lab, Combating Vigilance

Decrements in a Sustained Attention Task:

Lack of Support for the Utility of a Cognitive

Intervention Secondary Task

4.

Tyler H. Shaw, Kelly H. Satterfield, and Raul H.

Ramirez, George Mason U.; Victor Finomore,

U.S. Air Force Research Lab, A Comparison of

Subjective and Physiological Workload Assess ment Techniques During a 3-Dimensional

Audio Vigilance Task

5.

Veronica E. Scerra and J. Christopher Brill, Old

Dominion U., Effect of Task Modality on

Dual-Task Performance, Response Time, and Ratings of Operator Workload

Friday

Oct. 26

S5 – TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH INTO

PRACTICE: A MULTIAGENCY GOVERN -

MENT PERSPECTIVE

Discussion Panel

Friday, October 26, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Douglas (Mezzanine Level)

Safety

Chair: Eric Neiderman, Federal Aviation Admin.

Panelists: Stephen M. Popkin, Volpe National Trans portation Systems Ctr.; Colleen Donovan and Brian H.

Philips, Federal Highway Admin.; Sheryl Chappell,

National Transportation Safety Board; Chris Monk,

National Highway Traffic Safety Admin.; Maura

Lohrenz, Volpe National Transportation Systems Ctr.

O C TO B E R 2 5 – F R I D AY 47

Friday

Oct. 26

ST6 – DRIVING SIMULATORS AND VEHICLE

INTERIORS

Lecture

Friday, October 26, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Otis (Lobby Level)

Surface Transportation

Chair: Bryan Reimer, Massachusetts Inst. of Technol ogy; Cochair: Bruce Mehler, Massachusetts Inst. of

Technology

1.

Stacy A. Balk, Science Applications International

Corp., A Visual Comparison of a Single Sce nario in Three Driving Simulators

2.

Erwin R. Boer, Entropy Control, Inc.; John D.

Lee, U. of Wisconsin-Madison; Nicholas J. Ward,

Montana State U., Structuring Data to Com pare Driver Behavior Across Driving Simu lators

3.

Ben D. Sawyer and Peter Hancock, U. of Central

Florida, Development of a Linked Simulation

Network to Evaluate Intelligent Transporta tion System Vehicle to Vehicle Solutions

4.

Woojin Park, Seoul National U.; Chulhong Min,

Hyundai-Kia America Technical Ctr., Inc.; Loc

Perdu and Claudia Escobar, Hyundai-Kia America

Technical Ctr., Inc., Quantifying a Vehicle

Interior Design’s Ability to Accommodate

Drivers’ Preferences

5.

Matthew P. Reed, U. of Michigan, A Pilot Study of Three-Dimensional Child Anthropometry for Vehicle Safety Analysis

VE4 – VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS: CURRENT

& FUTURE TRENDS

Lecture

Friday, October 26, 8:30–10:00 a.m.

Stone (Lobby Level)

Virtual Environments

Chair: Amanda Surprenant, State Farm; Cochair:

Rebecca Kennedy, Old Dominion U.

1.

Mustufa H. Abidi, Ali Ahmad, Abdulaziz M. El-

Tamimi, and Abdulrahman M. Al-Ahmari, King

Saud U., Development and Evaluation of a

Virtual Assembly Trainer

2.

C. T. Guo and R. H. Y. Song, Hong Kong U. of

Science and Technology, Effects of Foveal

Retinal Slip on Visually Induced Motion

Sickness: A Pilot Study

3.

Michael Clamann and David B. Kaber, North

Carolina State U., The Effects of Haptic and

Visual Aiding on Psychomotor Task Strategy

Development During Virtual Reality-Based

Training

4.

Peter Venero, InfoSciTex; Allen Rowe, U.S. Air

Force Research Lab; James Boyer, InfoSciTex,

Using Augmented Reality to Help Maintain

Persistent Stare of a Moving Target in an

Urban Environment

5.

Matthew David Marraffino and John P. Killilea,

U. of Central Florida; Michael J. Singer, U.S. Army

Research Inst., Dynamic Automated Graphics and Dynamic Interactive Graphics: Tools for

Training on Tablet Devices

Friday, October 26

10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

AS7 – HUMAN FACTORS CHALLENGES FOR

FUTURE AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLERS

Lecture

Friday, October 26, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Grand Ballroom A (Concourse Level)

Aerospace Systems; cosponsored by Cognitive

Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Amy Alexander, Massachusetts Inst. of Tech nol ogy Lincoln Lab; Cochair: Meike Jipp, German

Aerospace Ctr.

1.

Annie Cho and Jonathan Histon, U. of Waterloo,

Factors Affecting the Learning of a New Air

Traffic Control Sector for Experienced Air

Traffic Controllers

2.

Sarah Gregg, Lynne Martin, Jeffrey Homola, Paul

Lee, Joey Mercer, Connie Brasil, Christopher

Cabrall, and Hwasoo Lee, San Jose State U.,

Shifts in Air Traffic Controllers’ Situation

Awareness During High-Altitude Mixed-

Equipage Operations

3.

Paul U. Lee, San Jose State U./NASA Ames Re search Ctr.; Thomas Prevot, NASA Ames Research

Ctr., Prediction of Traffic Complexity and

Controller Workload in Mixed-Equipage

NextGen Environments

4.

Kiran Lokhande, Massachusetts Inst. of Tech nology Lincoln Lab; Hayley J. Davison Reynolds,

Massachusetts Inst. of Technology Lincoln Lab,

Cognitive Workload and Visual Attention

Analyses of the Air Traffic Control Tower

Flight Data Manager (TFDM) Prototype

Demonstration

5.

Elizabeth D. Murphy, Harold A. Albert, Jennifer

M. Chen, and Gregory G. Anderson, Human Solutions, Inc., The Role of Mental Computations in Current and Future En Route Air Traffic

Control

48 O C TO B E R 2 5 – F R I D AY

C2 – BEYOND THE SPOKEN WORD

Lecture

Friday, October 26, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Stone (Lobby Level)

Communication

Chair: Daryle Gardner-Bonneau, Bonneau and Assoc.;

Cochair: Mark S. Pfaff, Indiana U.-Indianapolis

1.

Dawn L. Riddle, Organizational Systems Design,

Inc.; Roger J. Chapman, Collaborative Work Sys tems, Inc., Tactile Language Design

2.

Jaime C. Auton, Mark W. Wiggins, and Thomas

Loveday, Macquarie U., Prosodic Cues That

Signal Nonunderstandings to Power Control

Operators During Radio Communication

3.

Razia V. N. Oden, Cognitive Performance Group;

Laura G. Militello, Applied Decision Science,

LLC; Karol G. Ross, Cognitive Performance

Group; Christen E. Lopez, Applied Decision

Science, LLC, Four Key Challenges in Disas ter Response

4.

Afarin Pirzadeh and Mark S. Pfaff, Indiana U.,

Emotion Expression Under Stress in Instant

Messaging

CE16 – WHERE’S THE BEEF? IS COGNITIVE

ENGINEERING A PLAYER IN MILITARY

RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT TODAY?

Discussion Panel

Friday, October 26, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Commonwealth B/C (Concourse Level)

Cognitive Engineering & Decision Making

Chair: Cindy O. Dominguez, Applied Research Assoc.;

Cochair: Patricia McDermott, Alion Science and Tech nology

Panelists: Lawrence Shattuck, U.S. Navy Postgraduate

School; Pamela Savage-Knepshield, U.S. Army Re search Lab; Christopher Nemeth, Applied Research

Assoc.; Mark Draper, U.S. Air Force Research Lab

E5 – COMPUTERS AND HF/E EDUCATION:

BEST PRACTICES

Lecture

Friday, October 26, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Webster (Lobby Level)

Education

Chair: Thomas Strybel, California State U., Long Beach;

Cochair: Susan Plano-Faber, Plano-Faber Services, LLC

1.

Robert Pastel, Christopher Brown, Margo Woller-

Carter, and Shreya Kumar, Michigan Techno logi cal

U., Teaching Human Factors to Graduate and

Undergraduate Computer Science Students

2.

Haneen Saqer, Brian Kidwell, Craig Stoudt, and

Robert J. Youmans, George Mason U., Expand ing the Usability Toolkit: Using PowerPoint TM to

Perform Website Analysis and Testing

3.

Edward Dillon, Monica Anderson-Herzog, and

Marcus Brown, U. of Alabama, Studying the

Novice’s Perception of Visual vs. Command-

Line Programming Tools in CS1

4.

Drew Harnish, Chen Ling, and Randa Shehab, U.

of Oklahoma, Leveraging the Use of Mobile

Applications to Increase Knowledge Reten tion in a Classroom Lecture

HC15 –

COLLABORATION/COMMUNICATION

Lecture

Friday, October 26, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Harbor Ballroom III (Conference Level)

Health Care

Chair: Dean Hooper, Ximedica; Cochair: Monifa

Vaughn-Cooke, U. of Maryland

1.

Heidi S. Kramer and Frank A. Drews, U. of Utah,

Does the Shoe Fit? Applying Lessons Learned in Aviation to Healthcare

2.

Sarah Henrickson Parker, MedStar Inst. for Inno vation; Rhona Flin, U. of Aberdeen; Aileen

McKinley, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary; Steven J.

Yule, Harvard Medical School, Using Videos to

Determine the Effect of Stage of Operation and Intraoperative Events on Surgeons’ Intra operative Leadership

3.

Stacey Cunningham, Tufts U.; Caroline Cao,

Wright State U., Spatial Communication in

Robotic Surgery

4.

Onur Asan, Enid N.H. Montague, and Jie Xu, U.

of Wisconsin-Madison, Assessing Patient and

Doctor Eye Gaze Patterns Between Two

Styles of Doctor EHR Use in Primary Care

Encounters

5.

Esther Breton, Chelsea Kramer, Cindy Chamber land, Genvieve Dube, Gilles Chiniara, and

Sebastien Tremblay, Laval U., The Impact of

Communication Training in High-Fidelity

Simulation of Emergency ICU Resuscitation

Friday

Oct. 26

O C TO B E R 2 5 – F R I D AY 49

Friday

Oct. 26

HC16 – SIMULATION-BASED TRAINING

ACROSS THE MEDICAL EDUCATION

CONTINUUM

Discussion Panel

Friday, October 26, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Grand Ballroom C/D (Concourse Level)

Health Care

Chair: Megan E. Gregory, U. of Central Florida

Panelists: Lauren E. Benishek and Elizabeth H. Lazzara,

U. of Central Florida; Moshe Feldman, Virginia Com monwealth U.; Michael A. Rosen, Johns Hopkins U.;

Shawna J. Perry, Virginia Commonwealth U.

PD8 – DESIGN THEORY AND CONCEPTS

Lecture

Friday, October 26, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Burroughs (Conference Level)

Product Design

Chair: Jeremy Spaulding, Osram Sylvania; Cochair:

Tony Farfan, Design Concepts Inc.

1.

Siwen Liu and Sharon Joines, North Carolina

State U., Developing a Framework of Guiding

Interface Design for Older Adults

2.

Ganyun Sun and Shengji Yao, U. of New Bruns wick, A Framework for an Evolutionary Com putation Approach to Supporting Concept

Generation

3.

Brooke G. Bellows, Jordan F. Higgins, Melissa A.

Smith, and Robert J. Youmans, George Mason U.,

The Effects of Individual Differences in Work ing Memory Capacity and Design Environ ment on Design Fixation

4.

Ryan W. Wohleber and Gerald Matthews, U. of

Cincinnati, Implicit Attitudes in Consumer

Purchase Intent

PP10 – RESEARCH ON SYSTEMS FOR

COMMAND AND CONTROL

ENVIRONMENTS

Lecture

Friday, October 26, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Grand Ballroom E (Concourse Level)

Perception & Performance

Chair: Frank Lacson, Pacific Science & Engineering

Group; Cochair: William Kosnik, U.S. Air Force

1.

Victor S. Finomore, U.S. Air Force Research Lab;

Kelly Satterfield, George Mason U.; Adam Sitz,

Old Dominion U.; Courtney Castle, Boston Col lege; Gregory Funke, U.S. Air Force Research Lab;

Tyler Shaw, George Mason U.; Matthew Funke,

U.S. Air Force Research Lab, Effects of the

Multimodal Communication Tool on Communication and Change Detection for Command

& Control Operators

50

2.

Eric T. Chancey and James P. Bliss, Old Domin ion U., Reliability of a Cued Combat Identifi cation Aid on Soldier Performance and Trust

3.

Frank Eric Robinson, Wright State U.; Brian

Simpson and Victor Finomore, U.S. Air Force

Research Lab; Jeffrey Cowgill, Valerie L. Shalin,

Andrew Hampton, Thomas Moore, Terry Rapoch, and Robert Gilkey, Wright State U., Aurally

Aided Visual Threat Acquisition in a Virtual

Urban Battlespace

4.

Sara A. Lu, U. of Michigan; Christopher D.

Wickens, Alion Science and Technology; Nadine

B. Sarter, U. of Michigan; Lisa C. Thomas and

Mark I. Nikolic, Boeing Co.; Angelia Sebok, Alion

Science and Technology, Redundancy Gains in Communication Tasks: A Comparison of

Auditory, Visual, and Redundant Auditory-

Visual Information Presentation on NextGen

Flight Decks

5.

Ute Niederée, Technische U. Braunschweig;

Meike Jipp, German Aerospace Ctr.; Uwe Teegen,

German Aerospace Ctr.; Mark Vollrath, Technische

U. Braunschweig, Effects of Observability, Mood

States, and Workload on Human Handling

Errors When Monitoring Aircraft Automation

S6 – PREVENTION OF HIGH-CONSEQUENCE

INCIDENTS—LOOKING BEYOND THE

TECHNICAL FAILURES

Invited Address

Friday, October 26, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Douglas (Mezzanine Level)

Safety

Chair: Lawrence Hettinger, Liberty Mutual Research

Inst. for Safety; Cochair: Mary Lesch, Liberty Mutual

Research Inst. for Safety

Invited Speaker: Mark A. Griffon, U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board

ST7 – REDUCING MAJOR RULE VIOLATIONS

IN COMMUTER RAIL OPERATIONS: THE

ROLE OF DISTRACTION AND ATTENTION -

AL ERRORS

Discussion Panel

Friday, October 26, 10:30 a.m.–12:00 noon

Otis (Lobby Level)

Surface Transportation

Chair: Raja Parasuraman, George Mason U.

Panelists: George Elsmore, Veolia TransDev Inc.;

Matthew Isaac, Volpe National Transportation System

Ctr.; Donald L. Fisher, U. of Massachusetts Amherst

O C TO B E R 2 5 – F R I D AY

PARTICIPANT INDEX

Abbott, Kathy, 32

Abidi, Mustufa H., 48

Abuhamad, Alfred Z., 12

Acemyan, Claudia Ziegler, 34

Adams, Jeffrey K., 34

Adderley, Rick, 35

Adelstein, Bernard D., 19, 45

Aghazadeh, Fereydoun, 41

Ahmad, Ali, 48

Ahmed, Shaheen, 35, 41

Ahram, Tareq Z., 17, 43

Aitken, Mike, 29

Al-Ahmari, Abdulrahman M., 48

Albert, Harold A., 48

Albin, Tom, 25

Alexander, Amy L., 9, 48

Alfred, Petra E., 24, 30, 34

Ali, Sayed, 33

Alicia, Thomas J., 33, 44

Alqahtani, Meshael, 42

Al-Qaisi, Saif, 41

Altaboli, Ahamed, 17

Alvarado, Jeffry A., 20

Alyousef, Bashar M., 30

Amazeen, Polemnia G., 26

Anderson, Gregory G., 48

Anderson-Herzog, Monica, 49

Anderson-Montoya, Brittany L., 12

Andre, Anthony D., 8, 10

Andrews, Anya, 15

Angles, Joseph, 41

Arbaje, Alicia, 32

Archer, Julian, 27, 45

Arias, Oscar E., 43

Armstrong, Thomas J., 14, 20, 41,

43

Arsenault, Isabelle, 11

Arthur, James D., 14

Asan, Onur, 49

Ashton-Miller, James, 41

Atkinson, David, 32

Aulck, Lovenoor, 11

Austrian, Edward M., 9

Auton, Jaime C., 49

Ayres, Thomas, 42

Azar, Danielle, 23

Babski-Reeves, Kari, 33, 40, 41

Backs, Richard W., 24

Badura, Björn, 16

Bahn, Sangwoo, 28

Baik, Seon Pill, 26

Bailey, Ian, 15

Bailey, Shannon K.T., 22

Bain, Bianca, 46

Baker, Kelley M., 33

Baker, Nancy A., 25

Balakrishnan, Bimal, 15

Baldwin, Carryl L., 11, 18, 23,

36, 44

Balk, Stacy A., 48

Balogh, Bobbi, 40

Barbe, Mary F., 17, 33

Bareria, Piyush, 25

Barg-Walkow, Laura H., 40

Barnes, Stephen L., 40

Barnett, Jane, 35

Barr, Ann E., 17

Barshi, Immanuel, 34, 39

Bartha, Michael C., 11, 22, 28

Bass, Brock M., 42

Bass, Ellen J., 27, 40

Battiste, Vernol, 9, 34

Bauer, David, 13

Bazley, ConneMara, 8, 13

Beard, Bettina, 13

Beck, Melissa R., 44

Bedard, Stephane, 24

Beebe, Russ, 25

Beer, Jenay M., 24, 33, 38

Bekiaris, Evangelos, 46

Belfore, Lee A., 12

Bell, Jonathan, 34

Bellows, Brooke G., 50

Benishek, Lauren E., 29, 50

Benson, William, 47

Berlin, Sharon, 22

Bernal, Fernando, 25

Berry, Katherine A., 9, 19

Bertola, Mary Anne, 23

Bertuccelli, Luca F., 38

Beschorner, Kurt E., 24

Best, Christopher, 36

Bezek, Scott, 31

Billings, Deborah R., 18

Birckbichler, Julie, 10

Bisantz, Ann M., 13, 32

Black, Nancy, 11

Black, Sheila R., 35

Blaha, Jennifer, 21

Blair, Kasha, 23

Blais, Ann-Renée, 29

Blanchette, Mark G., 22

Blanco, Myra, 42

Blatter, Birgitte, 26

Blickensderfer, Elizabeth L., 25,

27, 45

Bliss, James P., 22, 24, 27, 44, 50

Blitch, John G., 13

Blocker, Renaldo C., 21

Blood, Ryan P., 47

Boda, Sruthi, 43

Boehm-Davis, Deborah A, 9, 21,

25, 33

Boer, Erwin R., 48

Boles, David B., 35

Bolling, Amy S., 30

Bolstad, Cheryl, 9, 46

Bolt, Taylor, 10

Bolton, Matthew, 21

Bonato, Paolo, 11

Borchardt, James G., 43

Boren, Suzanne A., 40

Borgvall, Jonathan, 38

Boring, Ronald Laurids, 16, 20,

41, 45

Borowsky, Avinoam, 14, 35

Bose, Tamal, 10

Botea, Adi, 14

Boucher, Denis, 24

Boussemart, Yves, 31

Bowers, Clint, 15

Boyce, Michael W., 13

Boyer, James, 48

Boyer, Kristy, 23

Boykin, Gary L., 24, 30

Boyle, Linda Ng, 8, 35, 37, 42

Bradley, Sierra, 40

Bradtmiller, Bruce, 25

Brasil, Connie, 48

Brawner, Keith W., 36

Breeden, Jared R., 24

Breslow, Leonard A., 43

Breton, Esther, 49

Bridges, Nathaniel R., 20

Brill, J. Christopher, 18, 44, 47

Brodsky, Jesse, 40

Brouwer, Anne-Marie, 34

Brown, Christopher, 44, 49

Brown, Marcus, 49

Brown, Roger L., 29

Brown, Timothy L., 12, 15

Brown, William S., 40

Brunelle, Noelle, 25

Brungart, Douglas S., 12

Bruni, Sylvain, 15, 37

Bruton, Kate, 34

Bryan, Ruth J., 17

Bryant, Michelle R., 28

Buhrman, John R., 20

Buinhas, Luisa S., 31

Buker, Timothy J., 27

Bunting, Michael F., 15

Burd, Randall S., 26

Burge, Rondell, 37

Burgess-Limerick, Robin, 19

Burgos, Marvick, 45

Burki-Cohen, Judith, 20

Burkolter, D., 31

Burnett, Gregory, 18, 28, 34

Burns, Catherine M., 11

Burns, Cheryl, 30

Burt, Susan, 40

Buxton, Bill, 21

Byrne, Cristina, 29

Byrne, Michael, 13

Cabrall, Christopher, 48

Caird, Jeff K., 14, 46

Caldwell, Barrett S., 14

Calhoun, Gloria L., 45

Camilleri, M., 11

Campbell, Susan G., 15

Campbell-Kyureghyan, Naira, 43

Cannon-Bowers, Janis, 32

Cao, Caroline G. L., 43, 49

Cao, Shi, 37, 43

Cao, Vincent, 40

Caplan, Stanley, 11, 19

Carayon, Pascale, 17, 29, 30, 32,

44, 46

Carbonari, Ronald, 13

Carolan, Thomas, 39

Carretta, Thomas R., 47

Carroll, John, 37

Carswell, C. Melody, 23, 34

Cartee, Natalee K., 23

Cartmill, Randi, 29, 30

Cassavaugh, Nicholas D., 24

Castle, Courtney, 23, 50

Castor, Martin, 20

Catchpole, Ken, 21

Catrambone, Richard, 21

Causse, Mickael, 22

Chaffin, Don B., 14

Chalk, Stephanie, 16

Chamberland, Cindy, 49

Chambers, April J., 38

Champion, Howard, 38

Champion, Michael, 36, 42

Chancey, Eric T., 50

Chandrasekaran, Vasudha, 38

Chang, Chien-Chi, 43

Chang, Joonho, 26

Chang, Yoon, 38

Chaparro, Alex, 22, 23, 37

Chaparro, Barbara S., 18, 22, 38

Chapman, Roger J., 24, 49

Chappell, Sheryl, 8, 47

Chauhan, Suneet P., 12

Chaundy, Kimberly, 30

Chavez, Lisa N., 17

Chen, Jennifer M., 48

Chen, Jing, 41

Chen, Nancy, 16

Chiappe, Dan, 17

Chignell, Mark, 47

Chin, Jessie, 46

Chin, Matthew G., 18

Chiniara, Gilles, 49

Cho, Annie, 48

Choi, Eunjung, 33

Choi, Hyosun, 22

Choi, Sang D., 43

Choi, Younggeun, 14

Cholewiak, Roger W., 14

Chourasia, Amrish O., 46

Chowdhury, Suman, Kanti, 33

Christensen, James C., 13, 39

Chrysler, Susan T., 12

Chu, B., 11

Chung, Min K., 14, 33, 45

Chung, Susan, Sung Eun, 29

Clamann, Michael, 15, 48

Clare, Andrew S., 16

Clark, Lindsey, 21

Clark, Luke, 29

Clark, Rylan M., 34

Clegg, Benjamin A., 39

Clemes, Stacy, 24

Cleveland, William P., 20

Cloete, Steven, 19

Cloutier, Claudine, 21

Coffey, Emily B. J., 34

Cohen, H. Harvey, 8

Cohen, Joseph, 8, 21

Cohen, Michael, 37

Cokely, Edward T., 29

Colby, Katrina, Angelina, 23

Colombo, Daniel J., 17

Coman, Michael S., 20

Conley, Davis, 24

Conner, Craig P., 41

Conner-Garcia, Thembi, 46

Conrad, Karen M., 47

Cook, Diane J., 12

Cook, Jacquelyn G., 34

Cook, Maia B., 39, 45

Cooke, Nancy J., 8, 14, 16, 21,

27, 36, 42

Cooper, Joel M., 12, 30

Cooper, Susan E., 40

Cornelissen, Miranda, 39

Costa, Jean M. R., 16

Costello, Anthony, 46

Coughlin, Joseph F., 12

Cowgill, Jeffrey, 36, 50

Cox, Elizabeth D., 29

Craig, Curtis, 18, 19

Crandall, Aaron S., 12

Crandall, Joseph M., 23

Creagor, Jim, 29

Creese, Robert C., 33

Crites, Michael J., 41

Crory, Timothy, 39

Cruit, Jessica K., 10

Cuadrado, Joseph, 14

Cuevas, Haydee M., 8, 46

PA RT I C I PA N T I N D E X 51

Participant

Index

Participant

Index

Cuizinaud, Mathilde, 24

Cullen, Ralph H., 28, 35

Culley, Kimberly E., 35, 37

Cummings, M. L., 13, 16, 27, 31,

38, 39, 47

Cunningham, Kerry, 34

Cunningham, Stacey, 49

Curtis, Michael T., 18

Cuthbertson, Brian, 26

Czaja, Sara J., 12, 14

D'Addario, Pamela M., 37

Dafoe, Joanna, 27

Dagnall, Erin E., 23

D'Amico, Anita, 16

Dan, Chiu, Shun, 35

Daraiseh, Nancy, 41

D’Arcy, Jean-François, 13

Dattel, Andrew R., 40

David, Tasha Y., 34

Davis, Doug, 18

Davis, James, 30

Davis, Kermit G., 26

Davis, Kristen, 8, 31

Davis, Stephen S., 12

Davis, Susan, 23

Davis, Thomas, 15

Dawson, Steven, 17

De Mers, Robert, 39 de Visser, Ewart J., 16 de Winter, J. C. F., 42

Degani, Asaf, 34, 38, 39

Dehais, Frédéric, 22

DeLucia, Patricia R., 22

Dempsey, Patrick G., 15, 19, 33, 47

Dennerlein, Jack T., 11, 26, 43

DePoy, Daniel, 10

DesRoches, Leon, 11

Dever, Daniel P., 40

Dhillon, Gurjot, Singh, 47

Dierks, Meghan M., 46

Dietrich, Carl, 10

Dietz, Aaron S., 27, 29

Dillard, Michael B., 35, 47

Dillon, Edward, 49

DiMare, Sara K., 33

Dolgov, Igor, 18

Dominguez, Cindy O., 49

Donmez, Birsen, 12, 15, 21, 27, 42

Donovan, Colleen, 32, 47

Dorlette-Paul, Melissa, 46

Dorneich, Michael C., 36, 39

Dove, Laura, 46

Dove-Steinkamp, Megan L., 23

Doyle, Peter, 43

Draper, Mark, 49

Drews, Frank A., 27, 35, 49

Driscoll, Sean, 17

Driskell, Tripp, 22

Droll, Jason A., 37

Drury, Colin G., 19, 47

D'Souza, Clive, 15, 25

Duarte, Emilia, 41

Dube, Genvieve, 49

DuBenske, Lori L., 29

Duda, K. R., 16

Duff, Sacha, 21

Duffield, Timothy, John, 22

Duncan, Matthew, 29

Duncan, Myanna, 24

Dunston, Phillip S., 35

Durham, Ken, 39

Durlach, Paula J., 19

Durso, Francis T., 10, 17, 22, 30,

39

Dyre, Brian P., 19, 23, 45

Easty, Anthony C., 21, 40

Eatchel, Kelly A., 35

Edwards, Rochelle, 17, 18

Ehrlich, Peter, 41

Eibling, David, 46

Eijckelhof, Belinda H. W., 11

Eisert, Jesse L., 26

El-Glaly, Yasmine, Nader

Mohamed, 47

Elkerton, Jay, 25

Elliott, Linda R., 14

Ellis, Stephen R., 19, 26, 45

Elsmore, George, 50

El-Tamimi, Abdulaziz M., 48

Emfield, Adam, 43

Endsley, Mica R., 9, 13, 16

Epling, Samantha, 47

Ericson, Jonathan, 15

Escobar, Claudia, 48

Estepp, Justin, 13

Evans, Mark, 39

Fairbanks, Rollin J., 11, 21, 29,

40, 43

Falcone, Brian L., 13

Fanjoy, Richard O., 44

Farahani, Elham, 27

Farfan, Rafael A., 41, 50

Farry, Michael, 13

Fathallah, Fadi A., 43, 44

Fausset, Cara, Bailey, 12

Feary, Michael, 28

Feathers, David J., 11

Feigh, Karen, 16, 28, 39

Feldman, Moshe, 50

Ferguson, Ashley N., 17

Ferguson, Sue A., 38

Fern, Lisa, 20

Fernandes, Alicia, Borgman, 39

Ferris, Thomas K., 10, 20, 35, 44

Fethke, Nathan, 33

Figueroa, Ivonne J., 40, 47

Filho, Roberto S. Silva , 16

Fincannon, Thomas, 19, 22, 28

Finch, Denise, 10

Fink, Nicole L., 42

Finomore, Victor S., 18, 23, 28,

34, 36, 47, 50

Fiore, Stephen M., 29, 34, 46

Fischer, Ute, 34, 39

Fisher, Donald L., 14, 50

Fisher, Paul W., 17

Fisk, Arthur D., 28, 35

Fitch, Gregory M. J., 12, 16, 30

Flach, John M., 21

Fleming, Elizabeth S., 20

Fletcher, J. D., 46

Flin, Rhona, 26, 49

Foley, Gloria, 29

Folsom-Kovarik, Jeremiah, 35

Forlines, Clifton, 37, 40

Forsythe, Chris, 8

Fortenbery, Nicholas, 13

Foster, Chris, 13

Fouse, Shannon, 42

Frank, B., 31

Frank, Matt, 39

Fratzola, Jessica K., 40

Freeman, Clinton, 14

Freivalds, Andris, 26, 43

French, Guy A., 47

Fretwell, Amanda, 18

Fricker, Jr., Ronald D., 44

Frischknecht, Adam, 20

Frischmann, Timothy, 22

Fuller, Thomas J., 40

Funke, Gregory J., 19, 36, 47, 50

Funke, Matthew, 47, 50

Gaalema, Diann, 18

Gagnon, Kyle, 27

Galarneau, Michael, 38

Galecki, Andrzej, 41

Gallagher, Sean, 33

Gallimore, Jennie J., 39

Galster, Scott M., 19

Gandy, Maribeth, 20

Gant, Lauren, 33

Gao, Fei, 27

Gao, Helen G. L., 17

Gao, Xuefei, 46

Garabet, A., 15, 18

Garay-Vega, Lisandra, 15

Garcia, Adrian, 23

Garcia, Andre, 18, 20

Garcia-Retamero, Rocio, 29

Gardner, Richard, 8, 46

Gardner-Bonneau, Daryle, 49

Garg, Arun, 43

Garrett, Lamar, 30

Gartenberg, Daniel, 26, 43

Garza, Jennifer L. Bruno, 11

Gaspar, John G., 24

Gausepohl, Kim, 14

Gawron, Valerie J., 20

Geels, Kasha, 18, 22

Geiselman, Eric, 9

Gemou, Maria, 46

Gerr, Fred, 33

Gerritsen, David, Brent, 27

Gertman, David, Ira, 20

Gewertz, Bruce, 21

Ghazizadeh, Mahtab, 35, 42

Giang, Wayne, 11

Gibbons, M. Chris, 11

Gielo-Perczak, Krystyna, 11, 40

Gilkey, Robert H., 12, 36, 50

Gillan, Douglas J., 35

Gilpin-McMinn, Julie, 13, 40

Giordano, Joseph S., 11

Goetz, Adam, 45

Gold, Judith E., 33

Goldberg, Benjamin, Scott, 36

Goldberg, Joseph H., 28

Goldman, Claudia V., 38

Goldstein, Rebecca R., 44

Gonzalez, Christian, 11, 23, 47

Gonzalez, Cleotilde, 16

Goodrich, Mike, 36

Goodwin, Meghan, 42

Goonetilleke, Ravindra S., 26, 44

Gordon, Claire, 25

Gorman, Jamie C., 27, 41, 43

Gould, Kristian S., 19

Goulet, Jean-Francois, 37

Govindu, Nirathi Keerthi, 40

Gramopadhye, Anand K., 46

Grant, Russell C., 23

Graumlich, James F., 46

Gray, Wayne D., 21, 33, 37

Green, Cooper, 20

Green, Fernando M., 17

Green, Randall, 39

Greenstein, Joel S., 17, 28, 46

Gregg, Sarah, 48

Gregory, Megan E., 50

Greve, Joseph, 31

Grier, Rebecca A., 26, 42, 46

Grieshaber, D. Christian, 40

Griffon, Mark A., 50

Grigoleit, Tristan, 9

Gross, Nina, 42

Guastello, Stephen J., 27

Guenzler, Torsten, 16

Gugerty, Leo, 15

Guimbretiere, Francois, 37

Guo, C. T., 48

Gurses, Ayse, 40, 44

Guthy, Catherine, 15

Gutierrez, Trini, 34

Gutzwiller, Robert S., 39

Hagemann, Vera, 31

Hah, Sehchang, 47

Hale, Christopher R., 21

Hale, K. S., 26

Hall, Daniel S., 24

Hallbeck, M. Susan, 29, 40, 41,

43, 47

Halse, Shane E., 18

Halverson, Tim, 13

Hampton, Andrew, 36, 50

Hancock, Gabriella M., 18, 19,

22, 44

Hancock, Mark, 34

Hancock, Peter A., 11, 13, 14,

18, 19, 25, 32, 34, 44, 48

Hankey, Jonathan M., 30

Hannon, Daniel, 10, 25

Happee, R., 42

Hardy, Megan, 23, 35

Haritos, Tom, 20

Harnish, Drew, 49

Harper, Christy A., 11, 28

Harper, Michelle E., 27, 39

Harris, Megan A., 18

Harsham, Bret, 14

Haslam, Cheryl, Olga, 24

Haslam, Roger, 24

Hassol, Andrea, 30

Hastings, Aaron, 15

Haus, Mirjam, 35

Havig, P., 8, 26

Hayes, Wilson C., 44

Heberger, John R., 15

Hecht, Heiko, 30

Heckman, Genevieve M., 30

Hedge, Alan, 9, 29, 37, 40

Hedman, Glenn E., 47

Henning, Robert A., 23

Herder, Ruth, Den, 29

Hernandez, Mario A., 12

Hersberger, Roger, 22

Herschler, Dan, 39

Hettinger, A. Zach, 29

Hettinger, Lawrence, 37, 50

Heyne, Kyle, 29

Higgins, James, Stephen, 20

Higgins, Jordan F., 50

Hill, John D., 30

Hilliard, Antony, 39

Hindman, Daniel, 41

Hirsch, Pierro, 24

Histon, Jonathan M., 34, 42, 48

Hodder, Simon, 18

Hodgetts, Helen M., 29

Hoffman, Joshua D., 12

Hoffman, Robert R., 10, 21, 32

Holbach, William H., 47

Holbrook, Jon, 13

52 PA RT I C I PA N T I N D E X

Holden, Heather K., 36

Holden, Kritina, 28

Holden, Richard J., 9, 44

Hollands, Justin G., 26, 35

Hollopeter, Nicole J., 15

Holt, Jeffrey, 38

Homola, Jeffrey, 48

Hong, Kyung Wha, 27

Hoonakker, Peter, 29, 30, 44

Hooper, Dean, 21, 49

Hoover, Adam, 45

Hoover, Connor, 17

Hope, Rowdy James, 23

Hor, Daniel, 18

Horn, Zachary N. J., 46

Hornof, Anthony, J, 37

Horrey, William J., 12

Horst, Dick, 8, 31

Horwood, Sharon, 36

Hoyle, Sloane, 18, 34

Hsieh, George, 10

Huang, Peter, 15

Huang, Y. H., 15, 18

Hudson, Irwin, 45

Hundt, Ann Schoofs, 29, 30

Hunt, Gayle, 18, 22

Hurwitz, Joshua B., 17

Hutchinson, Francis, 41

Huysmans, Maaike A., 11

Ikuma, Laura, 41

Imada, Andrew S., 8, 14

Inman, Vaughan W., 30

Irvine, John, 40

Irwin, Curt B., 41

Isaac, Matthew, 50

Ising, Kurt W., 37

Israelski, Edmond, 14

Iverson, David, 34

Iyer, Nandini, 12

Jackson, Kimberly F., 16

Jacobs, Brigid, 38

Jacobs, Karen, 10, 25

Jacobson, Melissa, 44

James, Tamara, 40

Jamieson, Greg A., 35, 42

Jander, Hans, 38

Jansen, Samantha D., 22, 35

Jardina, Jo R., 18, 22, 38

Jaridi, Majid, 33

Jariwala, Shree, 36

Jeffries, S., 18

Jenkins, Kathy, 9

Jenkins, Michael P., 13

Jentsch, Florian, 18, 22, 29, 45, 46

Jeon, Eunjin, 41

Jeon, Myounghoon, 34

Jeong, Jeongrim, 41

Jeter, Angela, 30

Jewell, Nicholas, 42

Jia, Bochen, 46

Jiang, Hong, 43

Jindrich, Devin L., 26

Jipp, Meike, 22, 41, 48, 50

Jo, Jang Hyeon, 26

Jobidon, Marie-Eve, 29

John, Bonnie E., 33, 37

Johnson, A. W., 16

Johnson, Cheryl I., 19

Johnson, Daniel R., 20

Johnson, Dustin, 39

Johnson, Peter W., 11, 47

Johnson, Walter, 20

Joines, Sharon, 14, 50

Kennedy, Quinn, 44

Kennedy, Rebecca A., 12, 48

Kenny, Caitlin A., 20

Kent, Travis M., 28

Kerr, Lois, 24

Keshavarz, Behrang, 30

Khare, Rachna, 14

Khunlertkit, Adjhaporn, 32

Kidwell, Brian D., 45, 49

Kiefer, Aaron, 16, 37

Kiken, Ariana, 9

Killilea, John P., 48

Kim, Chung Sik, 14

Kim, Ga-Won, 22

Kim, Hee-Eun, 41

Kim, Inki, 26

Kim, Jeong Ho, 11

Kim, Jung Hyup, 24

Kim, Robyn S., 9, 30

Kim, Soyun, 10

Kim, Wonmo, 26

Kirlik, Alex, 13, 36

Kirschner, Jennifer E., 44

Kiss, Steven, Brent, 39

Klein, Gary, 21, 32

Klein, Martina I., 18, 19

Kleiner, Brian, 14

Kleiss, James, 41, 44

Kluge, Annette, 16, 31, 42

Knott, Benjamin A., 19, 36

Knott, Camilla C., 46

Ko, Peiyi, 15

Kochhar, Dev S., 15

Koenecke, Corey, 33

Kohn, Spencer C., 42

Koikkara, Reshmi, 17, 46

Kopald, Hunter D., 41

Kortenhaus, Carole, 15

Jones, Debra, G, 8

Jones, Eric, 37

Jones, Jessica, 46

Jones, Keith S., 19

Josias, Liza, 16

Juang, Kevin A., 17, 28

Jung, Ilho, 38

Jung, Kihyo, 26, 38

Kaber, David B., 15, 48

Kajaks, Tara, 38

Kalisperis, Loukas, 15

Kaliwata, Vince, 39

Källhammer, Jan-Erik, 30

Kalsher, Michael J., 27, 28

Kaminishizono, Takeyoshi, 41

Kamzanova, Altyngul, 36

Kang, Bora, 45

Kar, Gourab, 25

Karl, Cathy, 21

Karl, Richard, 21

Karwowski, Waldemar, 11,

17, 43

Kaste, Katherine, 45

Kasten, Steven, 14, 20

Katz, Bryan J., 23

Kazi, Aadil, 24

Kazi, Sadaf, 17

Keebler, Joseph R., 8, 9, 29, 45

Keillor, Jocelyn, 44

Kelley, Christopher M., 23, 27

Kelley, John F., 25

Kelling, Angela, 18

Kelling, Nicholas, 18

Kelly, Michelle M., 29

Kemp, Charles C., 24, 33

Kortum, Philip, 18, 22, 34

Kosnik, William, 50

Kramarova, Olga, 31

Kramer, Arthur F., 24

Kramer, Chelsea, 49

Kramer, Heidi S., 35, 49

Krantz, Martin, 20

Krebs, William, 38

Kring, Jason, 20, 34

Kroeker, Shannon G., 37

Krois, Paul, 9

Krokos, Kelley J., 16

Krueger, Frank, 16

Krupenia, Stas, Simon, 24, 34

Kubose, Tate, 42

Kumagai, Jason, 43

Kumar, Ashok, 13

Kumar, Shreya, 49

Kustubayeva, Almira, 36

Kuzel, Michael J., 14

Kwasniak, Andrew, 14

Kwon, Sunghyuk, 33

Kyung, Gyouhyung, 45

Labedan, Patrice, 22

Lacson, Frank C., 17, 44, 45, 50

Lakhmani, Shan, 24

Landry, Steven J., 21, 25

Landsberg, Carla R., 23

Lang, Samantha, 12

Lange, Robert, 30

Langer, Kimberly, 34

Lansey, Jonathan, 37

LaPorte, Landon, Drew, 20

Larkin, Gabriella, Brick, 30

Laroche, Charles, 26

Larson, Kent L., 16

Latorella, Kara, 20

Lavender, Steven A., 33, 47

Lawnick, Mary, 38

Lawson, Benton, 14

Lazzara, Elizabeth H., 29, 50

Le Blanc, Katya L., 20

Lee, Baekhee, 38

Lee, Chin Chin, 12

Lee, David L., 26

Lee, Donghun, 14, 33, 45

Lee, Ellen L., 44

Lee, Hojin, 33

Lee, Hwasoo, 48

Lee, J., 15, 18

Lee, John D., 8, 12, 32, 35, 42, 48

Lee, Michael P., 23

Lee, Patrick J., 44

Lee, Paul U., 48

Lee, Samuel, 9

Lee, Wonsup, 14, 41

Leib, Steven M., 44

Lenker, James, 25

Lenne, Michael G., 39

Lennertz, Tracy, 20

Lesch, Mary, 50

Letowski, Tomasz, 34

Levulis, Samuel J., 22

Lew, Roger, 23, 45

Lewis, Bridget A., 11, 23, 44

Lewis, Charlotte, 47

Lewis, Mike, 36

Lewis, Vicki R., 21

Ley, Eric, 21

Li, Huiyang, 19, 44

Li, Shuo, 24

Li, Yaqiong, 29

Li, Yueqing, 22

Liang, Yulan, 12

Lichty, Monica G., 35

Liechty, Molly, 37

Likens, Aaron, 27

Lim, Jihyoun, 22

Lim, Sol I., 28

Lin, Brian T., 20

Lin, Sherry, 30

Lin, Yingzi, 17

Lineberry, Matthew, 23

Linegang, Michael P., 33

Ling, Chen, 49

Link, Drew, 15

Lio, Cindy H., 23

Liu, Alan, 17

Liu, Andrew M., 15

Liu, Dahai, 38

Liu, Siwen, 14, 50

Liu, Yili, 14, 37,43, 44, 47

Liutvinskaite, Jurate, 45

Lockhart, Thurmon E., 34, 46

Lohrenz, Maura C., 44, 47

Lokhande, Kiran, 48

Lopez, Christen E., 40, 49

Lottridge, Danielle, 41, 47

Loukopoulos, Loukia, 39

Loushine, Todd, William, 29

Loveday, Thomas, 23, 49

Lowndes, Bethany R., 29, 41

Lu, Peter J., 34

Lu, Sara A., 50

Lucassen, Teun, 17

Lum, Heather C., 8, 18, 24, 36

Lutas-Spencer, Belinda, 24

Luxion, Stephen P., 27, 45

Lyall, Beth, 27

Lyons, James L., 38

Ma, Chunyun, 42

Ma, Maggie J., 10

Macbeth, Jamie C., 38, 47

Macchiarella, Nickolas, 20

Macht, Gretchen A., 24

Madathil, Kapil, Chalil, 17, 33, 46

Maddox, Michael E., 16, 37

Madhavan, Poornima, 37

Maikala, Rammohan V., 38

Maiwald, Felix, 32

Majdic, Kristen, 40

Malony, Robert, 38

Mancuso, Vincent F., 42

Manes, Daniel I., 45

Manser, Tanja, 26, 37

Manzey, Dietrich, 16

Marble, Julie, 40

Mares, Anna, 30

Marklin, Richard, 46

Marraffino, Matthew D., 28, 48

Marras, William S., 11, 14, 21, 26

Marschner, Eli, 47

Marshall, Cynthia, 10

Marshall, Matthew M., 40

Martin, Lynne, 48

Martinez Usero, Jose A., 46

Mateo, Julio C. , 12

Matson, Zannah, 27

Matthews, Gerald, 14, 36, 50

Maulitz, Russell C., 32

Mauro, Robert, 39

May, Robert, 44

Mayer, Andrew, 14

Mayer, Rob, 39

Mayhorn, Christopher B., 9, 27, 44

Maynard, Andrew D., 28

Participant

Index

PA RT I C I PA N T I N D E X 53

Participant

Index

McBride, Maranda, 34

McBride, Sara E., 38

McCarley, Jason, S, 24, 43

Mcclernon, Christopher K., 39

McClure, Roderick, 39

McCrory, Bernadette, 29, 40

McCurry, J. Malcolm, 43

McDermott, Patricia L., 39, 49

McDonald, Anthony D., 12

McIntyre, Scott, 15

McKendrick, Ryan, 44

McKinley, Aileen, 49

McKnight, Patrick, 16

McLaughlin, Anne, Collins, 12, 20,

23, 24, 28, 30, 42

McLaurin, Elease J., 24

McLoone, Hugh, 38, 44

McMullin, Dianne, 11, 19

McNeese, Michael D., 16, 42

Mead, Patrick, 38

Meglan, Dwight, 15, 17

Mehler, Bruce, 12, 48

Mehta, Jay P., 47

Mehta, Ranjana K., 38, 45

Meingast, Melissa, 28

Menant, Eric, 22

Mendat, Christina, 14

Mercado, Alyssa D., 23

Mercer, Joey, 48

Meyer, Joachim, 16

Meyers, Elise A.G., 46

Mikkelsen, Christine, 39

Militello, Laura G., 11, 40, 49

Miller, Anne, 17, 32

Miller, Brandon J., 44

Miller, Christopher, 13

Miller, Emily E., 29, 40

Miller, Jacob A., 16

Miller, James C., 39

Miller, Marissa C., 40

Miller, Michael E., 20

Miller, Sarah M., 37, 40

Miller, William D., 21

Min, Chulhong, 48

Minkov, Yaniv, 33

Miranda, Andrew, 22

Mitchell, K. Blake, 34

Mitchell, Lucy, 26

Mitzner, Tracy L., 24, 33, 38

Mkrtchyan, Armen A., 47

Moacdieh, Nadine M., 35

Moehling, Krissy, 25

Moeller, Brandon, 39

Mohamed, Feroze B., 33

Mohapatra, Anand, 15

Monk, Chris, 47

Monnin, Jason, 13

Montague, Enid, 17, 34, 44, 49

Montano, Michael, 27, 41

Moon, Seung Ki, 26

Moore, Thomas, 36, 50

Morales, Gregory, 9

Morgan, Corey A., 9, 17

Morgan, Justin, 12

Morison, Alex, 13

Moroney, William F., 8, 33, 43

Morris, Anthony, 30

Morrison, Donald F., 33

Morrison, John E., 46

Morrow, Daniel G., 39, 46

Morrow, Patricia Sue Bockelman,

29

Mortimer, Bruce, 14

Mortimer, Rudolf G., 16, 37

Mosier, Kathleen L., 34, 39

Muddimer, Andrew, 28

Muller, Tijmen, 24

Muller-Gass, Alexandra, 29

Mullick, Abir, 13, 14, 25

Multer, Jordan, 15

Munc, Alec, 34

Munoz, Ricardo, Danny, 39

Murphy, Elizabeth D., 33, 48

Murphy, L. A., 15, 18

Murphy-Hill, Emerson, 27

Murray, Crystal, 45

Murray, Michael D., 46

Muth, Eric R., 45

Muttart, Jeffrey, 16, 37

Myung, Rohae, 37, 41, 43

Nagy, Allen, 13

Nählinder, Staffan, 18

Najle, Maxine B., 22, 28

Nakata, Akiko, 41

Nam, Chang S., 22, 28

Nam, Kyunghyun, 45

Nasarwanji, Mahiyar F., 15

Nass, Clifford, 47

Natapoff, A., 16

Nathan-Roberts, Dan, 14, 47

Nawyn, Jason, 16

Neider, Mark B., 24

Neiderman, Eric, 32, 47

Nelson, Erik T., 21, 33

Nemeth, Christopher, 28, 49

Nemire, Kenneth E., 10, 21, 37

Nery, Angelene, 34

Neubauer, Catherine, 14

Neville, Kelly, 27, 45

Ngo, Mary, Kim, 34

Nguyen, Anh B., 31

Nguyen, Bobby, Tran, 18

Nguyen, Duy, Tri, 22

Nguyen, Harry, 22

Nicholson, Denise, 35

Niederée, Ute, 50

Nikolic, Mark I., 50

Nimbarte, Ashish D., 33

Normore, Lorraine, 28

North, Robert, 11

Nou, Danny, 44

Nussbaum, Maury A., 46

Nyman, Jeremiah, 44

Oberfeld, Daniel, 22

O'Brien, Marita, 12, 13, 27, 46

O'Connell, Stephen D., 20

Odell, Dan, 11, 26, 38

Oden, Razia V. N., 49

Oglesby, James, Michael, 33

Oh, Chang-Geun, 39

Oh, Hyungseok, 37

O'Hara, Christine, 10

Ohnemus, Kenneth, 21

Øie, Sondre, 19

Okan, Yasmina, 29

Olson, Kirsten, 12

Oman, C. M., 16

Onal, Emrah, 13

Onnasch, Linda, 16

Ophir-Arbelle, Ronny, 33

Orasanu, Judith, 34, 40

Orihuela, Cristina, Beltran , 14

Oron-Gilad, Tal, 22, 33, 35

Oskarsson, Per-Anders, 18

Ososky, Scott, 18

Owens, Justin W., 18, 22

Oxstrand, Johanna H., 20

Page, Lenore T., 40

Pageau, Gilles, 24

Pak, Richard, 12, 42

Pala, Silviu, 12

Palmer, Evan M., 22, 23, 44

Paquet, Victor L., 15, 25, 40

Parasuraman, Raja, 10, 13, 16, 25,

38, 44, 45, 47, 50

Park, Daecheol, 41

Park, Jangwoon, 41

Park, Sanghyun, 47

Park, Seikwon, 41

Park, Sungjin, 43

Park, Woojin, 48

Parke, Bonny, 40

Parker, Sarah, Henrickson , 21,

26, 37, 46, 49

Parmet, Yisrael, 35

Parr, Jeffrey C., 20

Parsons, Ken, 18

Parush, Avi, 42

Pastel, Robert, 28, 33, 49

Patrick, Rafael, 34

Patterson, Emily S., 11, 25

Patton, Evan W., 33, 37

Paulsen, Marianne, 23, 31, 33

Pavlas, Davin, 46

Paz, Melissa, 34

Pearson, Aimee, 46

Penaranda, B. N., 11, 36

Peng, Yiyun, 42

Pennathur, Priyadarshini R., 21, 40

Perchonok, Jennifer, 34

Percival, Nicole B., 46

Perdu, Loc, 48

Pereira, Anna, 26

Peres, S. Camille, 22, 23, 28, 34

Perry, Chris E., 20

Perry, Shawna J., 37, 40, 50

Peterse, Henricus P. M., 15

Pew, Richard W., 10, 14, 21

Pfaff, Mark S., 49

Pfautz, Jonathan D., 13, 28

Phan, Mikki H., 18, 22

Phelps, Mandy C., 18

Philips, Brian H., 47

Phillips, Elizabeth K., 18, 27, 38, 45

Phillips, Rachel R., 37

Phillips, Ronald G., 34

Photiadis, David, 27

Piccione, Dino, 32

Pierce, Linda, 29, 36, 39

Pirzadeh, Afarin, 49

Plano-Faber, Susan, 49

Planitz, Birgit, 14

Pokorny, Robert, 15

Pollack, Jay, 14

Pollard, John K., 15

Pollard, Jonisha P., 15, 47

Poore, Joshua C., 40

Pop, Vlad, 22, 39

Popescu, Vlad M., 20

Popkin, Stephen M., 47

Popoff, Steven N., 17

Popola, Allison, 38

Porter, William L., 19, 47

Poston, Alan, 25

Pousette, Jerry, 20

Powers, Christopher, M, 22

Prakash, Akanksha, 24, 33

Pratt, Stephanie M., 11, 23, 47

Presting, Palle, 16

Prevot, Thomas, 48

Price, Margaux, 42

Priest-Walker, Heather A., 19

Prinet, Julie, Clemence, 45

Pritchett, Amy R., 20, 28

Proaps, Alexandra, 15, 24

Probst, C. Adam, 46

Procci, Katelyn, 15

Proctor, Robert W., 35, 41

Prytz, Erik, 12, 41

Punnett, Laura, 26

Puryear, Jordan E., 24

Quek, Francis, 47

Quevedo, Jose, 18

Quinn, Matthew, 11

Ragsdale, Stuart, Austin, 45

Rahman, Moin, 41

Rajivan, Prashanth, 36

Ramberg, Robert, 38

Ramirez, Anthony, 24

Ramirez, Raul H., 13, 47

Ranganayakulu, Sanjay, 28, 46

Rantanen, Esa M., 10, 43

Rapoch, Terry, 36, 50

Rashedi, Ehsan, 46

Raslear, Thomas, 15

Rauschenberger, Robert, 30

Raybourn, Elaine M., 24

Rayo, Michael F., 40

Read, Gemma J. M., 39

Reader, Tom, 26

Reagan, Ian J., 22

Rebelo, Francisco, 41

Redden, Elizabeth S., 14

Redfern, Mark S., 38

Reed, Matthew P., 25, 48

Reeves, Patrick, 10

Regan, John, 37, 40

Régis, Nicolas, 22

Reich, Kendra, 34

Reichelt, Paul A., 47

Reid-Arndt, Stephanie, 40

Reimer, Bryan, 12, 48

Rempel, David, 11, 15, 26

Resnick, Marc L., 8, 18, 21, 25

Reynolds, Hayley J. Davison, 48

Reynolds, Tom G., 9

Rhodes, Dustin, 47

Rice, Stephen, 18, 22, 23

Rice, Valerie J. B., 8, 24, 30, 34

Richard, Christian M., 35

Richards, Lindsey, 34

Riddle, Dawn L., 24, 49

Riddle, Kenyon, 13

Riegelman, Alex, 22

Riggle, Jakeb D., 29, 40

Riley, Jennifer, 8, 24

Ringstad, Arne J., 19

Rinz, Alexa, 10

Riordan, Brian, 37

Ritchey, Paul, 22

Ritter, Jill, 34

Rivera, Javier, 18

Rivera-Rodriguez, A. Joy, 29, 44

Roady, Trey, 20

Roberts, Daniel M., 11, 23

Roberts, Shannon C., 2, 35, 42

Robertson, M. M., 15, 18, 29

Robinson, Frank, Eric, 36, 50

Rodriguez, Ania, 25

Rodriguez, Michael A., 38

Rogers, Wendy A., 12, 24, 25,

28, 33, 35, 38, 40

54 PA RT I C I PA N T I N D E X

Rogers, William, 39

Rolfes, Nate, 35

Rollo, Amanda, 10

Romanovsky, Maria, 47

Romoser, Matthew R. E., 14, 24

Rooney, Chris, 35

Rorie, Conrad, 17

Rosen, Michael A., 26, 32, 40,

46, 50

Rosenquist, Bryce E., 17

Rosopa, Patrick J., 30

Ross, Karol G., 49

Roth, Emilie M., 10, 13, 16, 28

Rovira, Ericka, 32

Rowe, Allen, 48

Rubinstein, Joshua, 24

Ruel, Francois, 24

Ruff, Heath A., 45

Ruff, Stefan, 16

Ruffner, John, 43

Rupert, Angus, 14

Rupp, Michael, Alan, 12

Russ, Alissa L., 40, 46

Russell, Ashley, 10

Russell, Sheldon M., 19, 36

Ryan, Jason C., 16, 47

Rynell, Patrik W., 47

Sackllah, Michael, 14

Sadeeshkumar, Harini, 26

Sætrevik, Bjørn, 15

Saffarian, M., 42

Sakai, Sakiko, 41

Salas, Eduardo, 16, 29, 32, 33

Salek, Doreen, 30

Salley, James, Nathaniel, 45

Salmon, Paul M., 39

Salvucci, Dario, 21

Salzer, Yael, 22

Salzman, Jonathan A., 30

Samms, Charneta, 32

Sanchez, Alicia, 24

Sanders, Tracy L., 18, 34

Sanderson, Penelope M., 14, 39

Sandry, Joshua, 22, 23

Saqer, Haneen, 49

Sargus, Catherine, 40

Sarter, Nadine B., 19, 33, 35, 45,

50

Sasangohar, Farzan, 21

Satterfield, Kelly H., 23, 47, 50

Savage-Knepshield, Pamela, 30, 49

Savan, Beth, 27

Sawyer, Ben D., 44, 48

Sawyer, Michael W., 9

Saxby, Dyani, 14

Scerbo, Mark W., 12, 17, 41

Scerra, Veronica E., 42, 47

Schaefer, Kristin E., 18, 34

Schantz, Daniel, J, 29

Scharff, Lauren F. V., 22

Schatz, Sae, 35

Scheid, Steven, 16

Schmeisser, Elmar T., 14

Schmidlin, Elizabeth A., 19

Schmidt, Christina, 36

Schmidt, Tarah N., 18, 19, 28, 44

Schmidt-Nielsen, Bent, 14

Schmitter-Edgecombe, Maureen,

12

Schmorrow, Dylan D., 46

Schraagen, Jan Maarten, 17

Schreckenghost, Debra, 13

Schulte, Axel, 32

Schumacher, Robert, 11

Schurr, Nathan, 37

Schuster, David, 29

Schütte, Simon, 44

Schwark, Jeremy, 22

Schwarz, Chris, 12

Scielzo, Sandro, 46

Scisco, Jenna L., 45

Scott, Ronald, 13

Seagull, F. J., 21, 43

Seales, Brent, 23

Sebok, Angelia, 19, 33, 43, 50

Seidelman, Will T., 23, 34

Sellers, Brittany C., 22, 34

Serge, Stephen R., 19

Sethumadhavan, Arathi, 8, 46

Shaffer, Victoria, 22

Shalin, Valerie L., 36, 50

Shapiro, Ronald G., 8

Sharek, David, 42

Sharit, Joseph, 12

Shattuck, Lawrence, 49

Shaw, Tyler H., 13, 47, 50

Sheedy, James, 15

Sheehan, Chelsea C., 40

Shehab, Randa, 49

Shergill, Amandeep, 43

Sheridan, Thomas B., 10, 21

Shin, Gwanseob, 33

Shingledecker, Clark, 39

Shively, Robert J., 20

Shortz, Ashley E., 45

Shouhed, Daniel, 21

Shrader, David M., 33

Shrewsbury, Alex, 22

Shukla, Karan, 35

Shum, Joseph, 34

Shutko, John, 35

Sierra, Mary Jane, 29

Silva, Hector, 9

Simoens, Kristin, 21

Simons, Daniel J., 24

Simpson, Brian D., 12, 23, 36, 50

Simpson, Timothy W., 26

Sims, Valerie K., 18, 22, 28

Sinatra, Anne M., 22, 28

Singer, Michael J., 48

Singh, Gurjeet, 24, 47

Sinocruz, Jerome, 14

Sitz, Adam, 50

Siva, Navaneethan, 23

Sloan, Gary D., 21

Smallman, Harvey S., 45

Smarr, Cory-Ann, 24, 33

Smets, Nanja, 25

Smith, Adam G., 35

Smith, Amanda, 18

Smith, Carl F., 36

Smith, Danielle, 28

Smith, Elida C., 41

Smith, Kip, 30

Smith, Melissa A., 16, 50

Smith, Michael J., 25

Smith, Michelle, 35

Smith, Philip J., 10, 13, 39

Smith, Stephen, 13

Smith-Jackson, Tonya L., 10, 14,

41, 47

Smith-Jentsch, Kimberly, 29

So, Joey C. Y., 35

Soangra, Rahul, 34

Solovey, Erin T., 47

Sommerich, Carolyn, 11

Song, R. H. Y., 48

Song, Xiping, 16

Sorensen, Glorian, 43

Sparko, Andrea L., 20

Spaulding, Jeremy M., 25, 38, 50

Spence, Charles, 44

Spriggs, Sarah, 45

Springman, Jennifer M., 38

Sprufera, John, Fitzgerald, 30

Stader, Sally, 45

Stafford, Ashley A., 23, 30

Stahl, Patrick, 42

Stankovic, Aleksandra, 29

Stanton, Neville A., 39

Stark, Robert F., 13

Stearns, Mary D., 15

Ste-Croix, Chris, 24

Steege, Linsey M., 40

Steelman, Kelly, S, 43

Stefanucci, Jeanine, 27

Stefonetti, Matthew C., 40

Steinberg, Marc, 36

Steinberg, Richard, Kelly, 24

Steinfeld, Edward, 15, 25

Steinhauser, Natalie, 23

Stephens, Benjamin, 10

Stephens, Robert J., 21, 25

Stevens, Ronald K., 27, 36, 41

Stimpson, Alexander J., 31

Stine-Morrow, Elizabeth A. L., 46

Stoffel, Sonja, 43

Stokes, Charlene, 32

Stokes, Thomas, 29

Stone, Nancy J., 32

Stone, Richard T., 17, 24, 39, 42

Stoudt, Craig, 49

Strang, Adam J., 19, 36

Strater, Laura D., 15, 46

Streater, Jonathan, 29

Streefkerk, Jan Willem, 25

Strybel, Thomas Z., 9, 34, 49

Sublette, M. A., 23, 34

Suh, Hyewon, 34

Sullivan, Joseph, 44

Sullivan, Katlyn, 39

Sullivan, Seamus, 37

Sun, Ganyun, 36, 50

Sun, Xianghong, 37

Surana, Amit, 38

Surprenant, Amanda, 48

Suss, Joel, 25

Swanson, Leah, 37

Swider, Cathy, 32

Swigert, Brittany, 18

Sycara, Katia, 36

Szalma, James L., 10, 11, 18, 19,

28, 44

Szczerba, Joseph, 22

Tack, Dave, 24

Talamonti, Walter J., 15

Talleur, Donald, 13

Tappan, Jackie, 39

Taveira, Alvaro D., 17

Taylor, Grant S., 36

Taylor, Jesseca, Rosanne Israel, 30

Taylor-Brown, Peter, Hutton, 25

Teegen, Uwe, 50

Teles, Júlia, 41

Teo, Grace W., 18, 19, 28, 40, 44

Terhune, Andrew, 45

Teves, Jennifer, 18

Thakkar, Dhruv A., 20

Thamsuwan, Ornwipa, 47

Thamvichai, Ratchaneekorn, 10

Tharanathan, Anand, 34

Thiruvengada, H., 26, 45

Thomas, Geb, 15

Thomas, Gina, 11, 13

Thomas, Lisa C., 50

Thompson, Darcy L., 29

Thompson, Maria, 16

Thornburg, Kristopher M., 15

Thornton, Mark, 24

Thornton, Ross, 26

Thornton, Wayne, 13

Thorpe, Elaine, 34

Thrailkill, Elizabeth A., 41

Tijerina, Louis S., 15

Tolani, Devendra, 15

Tomcavage, Janet, 30

Tomko, Linda, 34

Topper, Joan, 29

Toy, Kevin J., 34

Trafton, J. Gregory, 43

Trbovich, Patricia, 21, 40

Tremblay, Sebastien, 22, 29, 49

Trenchard, Michael, 44

Treviranus, Jutta, 46

Trochez, Gabrielle, 41

Trombley, Roger, 35

Trudeau, Matthieu B., 26

Trujillo, Amanda K., 20

Truxler, Robert, 13

Tsai, Jennifer, 36

Tsang, Pamela S., 39

Tuttle, Stephanie, 24

Twumasi, Ricardo, 24

Tyree, Gina, May, 12

Tyrrell, Richard A., 23, 30

Ueda, Mayuko, 15

Ulin, Sheryl, 41

Umukuro, Peter E., 43

Vachon, François, 22, 29

Valenziano, Steven, 14

Vallières, Benoit R., 29

Van Buskirk, Wendi L., 23 van de Merwe, Koen, 19 van der Beek, Allard J., 11 van der Hulst, Anja H., 24 van Dieen, Jaap H., 11

Van Dyke, Sarah, 45 van Erp, Jan B. F., 14, 34 van Lamsweerde, Amanda, 44

Vanderheiden, Gregg C., 46

Varga, Margaret, 25

Vargas, Joseph, 34

Vaughn-Cooke, Monifa, 49

Veinott, Beth, 21

Venero, Peter, 48

Vigilante, William J., 10, 41

Villarreal, Jessica, 30

Vincenzi, Dennis, 38

Viraldo, Jacob, 14

Vogt, Jason E., 40

Vollrath, Mark, 50 von der Heyde, Ananda, 16

Vos, Wouter, 25

Vredenburgh, Alison G., 10, 37

Vu, Kim-Phuong L., 8, 9, 17, 34

Wada, Kazushige, 15

Wade, Christine K., 17

Wadman, Michael C., 29, 40

Wagner, Alan R., 32

Wakefield, Douglas S., 40

Walker, Alexander D., 46

Walker, Bruce N., 34

PA RT I C I PA N T I N D E X 55

Participant

Index

Participant

Index

Walker, James M., 29, 30

Wallis, Guy, 19

Walsh, Daniel R., 40

Wampler, Jeffrey, 13

Wanchisen, Barbara, 14

Wang, Ellen, 47

Wang, Wenbi, 32

Wang, Wenjiao, 14

Wang, Ying, 12

Ward, Nicholas, J, 48

Ward, Paul, 25

Warm, Joel S., 47

Warren, William H., 15

Waterson, Patrick, 44

Watts, Kristopher P., 17

Wears, Robert L., 37

Weaver, Kristen, 39

Weil, Shawn, 28

Weinberg, Garrett, 14

Wells, Wilfred, 36

Wen, H. Y., 16

Wenzel, John, 12

Werner, Nicole E., 9, 21

Werner, Steffen, 17

Werth, Abigail J., 33

Westley, David, 35

Wetterneck, Tosha, 44

Wheeler, Noah J., 19

Whetsel, Stephanie A., 23, 30

Whitaker, Elizabeth T., 21

White, Corinne E., 16

Whitlock, Laura A., 12, 20

Whitlow, Stephen D., 39

Wickens, Christopher D., 19, 33,

39, 50

Wiczorek, Rebecca, 16

Wideman, Reginald, 42

Wiebe, Eric, 23, 42

Wiegmann, Douglas, 21

Wiese, Emily, 23, 35, 38

Wiggins, Mark W., 23, 49

Wilkins, Matthew, 46

Willems, Ben, 20

Williams, Clara, 29

Williams, Kevin W., 27

Winchester, Woodrow, 14

Wing, Vern, 38

Winkelstein, Beth, 26

Winter, Scott, Richard, 44

Wismer, Andrew J., 17

Wogalter, Michael S., 10, 30, 41,

44

Wohleber, Ryan W., 50

Wolf, Laurie, 43, 46

Woller-Carter, Margo, Mae, 29, 49

Wollocko, Arthur, 13

Wong, B. L. William, 25

Wong, Jason H., 31

Wong, William, 35

Woo, Jincheol, 22

Woods, David D., 10, 13, 28

Woolley, Charles, 14, 41

Wray, Robert, 35

Wreathall, John, 40

Wright, Nathan L., 20

Wu, Xuefang, 34

Xiao, Tania, 14, 39

Xiao, Yan, 32, 43, 46

Xie, Anping, 29

Xin, Chensheng, 10

Xu, Jie, 49

Yager, Christine E., 12

Yagoda, Rosemarie E., 29, 45

Yamani, Yusuke, 46

Yang, Ji Hyun, 44

Yang, Shiyan, 35

Yang, Xiaopeng, 14

Yao, Shengji, 36, 50

Yeh, Michelle, 15, 32

Yeoh, Han T., 34

Yeom, Kiwon, 19, 45

Yona, Omri, 35

Yoo, Hyo-sang, 25, 35

Yordon, Ryan E., 18

You, Heecheon, 14, 38, 41

Youmans, Robert J., 26, 31, 40,

47, 49, 50

Young, Douglas E., 30

Young, Justin G., 41

Young, Lee Ann, 38

Younkin, Jim, 29, 30

Ysebaert, Stephaine, 34

Yu, Catherine, 47

Yu, Denny, 14, 20

Yuan, Xiaochen, 34

Yue, Rossini, Ying Kwan, 40

Yule, Steven J., 26, 49

Yun, Myung-Hwan, 22, 43

Zachary, Wayne, 32

Zackowitz, Ilene B., 10, 37

Zeltzer, David, 45

Zeng, Xiaolu, 37

Zhang, Han, 11

Zhang, Jingyi, 14

Zhang, Yijing, 13

Zhang, Yunfeng, 37

Zhao, Nan, 12

Zheng, Xianjun, Sam, 16

Zhu, Biyun, 37

Zhu, Xinhui, 33

Ziccardi, Jason, 9

Zikmund-Fisher, Brian J., 22

Zimmerman, Karl, 15

Zingale, Carolina M., 20

Zoetrum, Jonathan J., 20

Zohar, D., 15

Zulas, A. Leah, 12

Zuniga, Jorge, 29

Zupanc, Christine, 19

Zweber, Ben, 39

Notes

56 N OT E S

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Time Monday

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P E R S O N A L P L A N N E R 57

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Human Factors and Ergonomics

Society 57th

Annual Meeting

San Diego

September 30–October 4, 2013

Human Factors and Ergonomics Society

57th Annual Meeting

Featuring:

7

Hands-on workshops

7

100+ technical sessions covering up-to-date

research and applications on a broad range

of human factors/ergonomics areas

7

Keynote address

7

Student Forum session track

7

Interactive posters and demonstrations

7

Technical site tours

7

On-Site Career Center

Hilton San Diego Bayfront

San Diego, California USA

September 30–October 4, 2013

Photos courtesy of SanDiego.org. Shamu photo courtesy of SeaWorld.

Bookmark hfes.org for regular updates about:

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creating a personal meeting itinerary

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Call for Proposals opens: December

17, 2012

Proposals due date: February

19, 2013

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FACILITY MAP

CARLOW

1982 – 2012

Providing Human Factors Expertise to Government Agencies and Industry organizations Worldwide for

30 years

A 21st Century Contract Research Company of Consultants and Teams solving human performance problems

Primarily involved in applying Human Systems Integration (HSI) to complex technology and systems, and conducting human performance research for the

U.S. Department of Homeland Security, including definition of a standard HSI process, and conduct of human performance requirements analysis, design of user interfaces, risk reduction, and HSI test and evaluation.

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