A Practical Guide to Developing Reliable Human-Machine Systems 2nd Edition

A Practical Guide to Developing Reliable Human-Machine Systems 2nd Edition

$75.00

This publication has four objectives:

  • Motivate designers to consider the impact of humans early in the development of systems and processes, when the opportunities for improvement are the greatest
  • Serve as a bridge or intermediate step between introductory tutorials and short courses on human factors and human reliability and the many excellent but more extensive texts on human factors
  • Serve as a highly understandable and readily accessible source of human factors and human reliability information to those who have limited acquaintances with these subjects
  • Provide information on types of tools that are useful in human-oriented design

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Product Description

This publication has four objectives:

  • Motivate designers to consider the impact of humans early in the development of systems and processes, when the opportunities for improvement are the greatest
  • Serve as a bridge or intermediate step between introductory tutorials and short courses on human factors and human reliability and the many excellent but more extensive texts on human factors
  • Serve as a highly understandable and readily accessible source of human factors and human reliability information to those who have limited acquaintances with these subjects
  • Provide information on types of tools that are useful in human-oriented design

Motivating the consideration of the human impact early in the development of systems and processes is both a noble and a practical objective. It is noble in the sense that developers have the opportunity to make the use and maintenance of systems and processes easier for humans. It is a practical objective because early consideration yields the greatest economic and performance gains. The opportunities for improvement are the greatest early in the development of the system or process. Too frequently, developers defer the consideration of the humans to late in the design process with the consequences of expensive fixes, extended schedules, or numerous human errors in operation and maintenance.

Serving as a bridge and a highly understandable and readily accessible source of human factors and human reliability information allows this publication to provide the working knowledge to help achieve the first objective. Introductory tutorials, such as those on videotape, compact disk, Webinars and in oral presentations, provide only a brief exposure to the knowledge required to ensure that humans perform properly in systems and processes. On the other hand, the many excellent textbooks and reference volumes provide detailed presentations of human factors data or contain extensive explanations of the human factors and the human reliability principles. Extracting useful information from these publications frequently is rather laborious. As a bridge, this publication provides concise, readily understandable descriptions of widely applicable principles, provides selected data, and directs the reader to the sources of more detailed data. This publication does not substitute for those more extensive publications, but rather serves as a pathway to them.

Most noteworthy in this second edition is the inclusion of an appendix, “A Step-By-Step Procedure for Incorporating Human Reliability into Reliability Predictions”. The intent of this appendix is to provide the practicing reliability engineer with the means by which to account for human reliability in reliability predictions in an elementary way. As with the other information in this guide, the appendix does not address many of the more complicated interactions between humans and between humans and machines. The appendix will get the engineer well on his/her way to estimating the reliability of human elements in a system or process.”

There is much material in the text that pertains to the conduct of a human factors engineering program. This is included to provide the reliability engineer with an understanding of how information is developed regarding the roles of human in the system or for the product. From the human factors engineering activities, the reliability engineer can extract the information needed to meet the data needs of the cognitive model. Thus, reliability engineers are encouraged to participate in those human factors engineering activities that can supply the data that they need.

© 2016 K.P. LaSala Reprinted by permission of the author.

Additional information

ISBN-13

978-1-933904-71-9

Format

PDF Download

Author

Kenneth P. LaSala, PhD

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