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Putting Everyday Products to the Test

Human-Factors Engineers Focus on User Friendliness

September 1, 2006

Human-factors engineers -- whose training includes psychology -- specialize in testing products for usability, for example checking whether a copying machine's legs get in the way, or measuring how much force it takes to open a coffee canister. The engineers can then suggest design changes, which benefit all users but especially those with disabilities or conditions such as arthritis.

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Science Insider

Science behind the news is funded by a generous grant from the NSF

BACKGROUND: Brad Fain and his colleagues at the Georgia Institute of Technology's Center for Assistive Technology and Environmental Access spend a good deal of their lab hours testing and understanding a wide range of consumer products to evaluate how easy they are to use for people with disabilities. They can then recommend design improvements to improve that usability. Specifically, they employ a "human factors" design and engineering approach that focuses on the interface between humans and machines. To date they've studied everything from photocopiers, ATM machines, cell phones, and televisions, to medicine bottles, printers and scanners.

ABOUT UNIVERSAL DESIGN: Fain's team recruits volunteer participants of disabled people from the local community. Those participants perform a series of tasks with the products being tested and their performance is monitored by the researchers and compared to a standardized evaluation checklist -- more than 400 in all, collected in a comprehensive database called the Accessibility Assistant. The result is objective data about how easy the product is to use that enable Fain and his colleague to make useful design recommendations. It's called "universal design," intended to make a product accessible to as many different types of users as possible. For example, a cell phone might be created for the hard of hearing, which would also be useful for anyone trying to carry on a cell phone conversation in a noisy environment. Similarly, a cell phone designed for the blind would also be useful for people whose visual attention is focused elsewhere, such as while driving a car.

WHY IT'S NEEDED: Starting in 2001, federal agencies that purchase electronic and information technology equipment have to consider accessibility in their purchasing decisions. There are also nonprofit organizations like the Arthritis Foundation that sponsor research to determine a product's ease of use for arthritic patients, who often have mobility problems and difficulty grasping and lifting, as well as reduced sensation.

HUMAN FACTORS SCIENCE: This is a branch of science that strives to design the job to fit the worker, rather than the other way around. In the modern office, it most commonly relates to the physical stresses placed on joints, muscles, nerves, tendons, bones, even hearing and eyesight, along with other environmental factors that can adversely affect comfort and health. Ergonomics deals with the interaction of technology and work environments with the human body, and involves such things as anatomy, physiology, and psychology in the design of chairs, desks, computer accessories, the design of car controls and instruments ý in short, any kind of product that could help relieve potential repetitive strain from a given job or task.

The Human Factors and Ergonomics Society contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report.

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More information on this story

Brad Fain
Georgia Tech
Atlanta, GA
Tel: 404-894-7261
brad.fain@gtri.gatech.edu

Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
Santa Monica, CA 90406
Tel: 310-394-1811