ergonomics Flashcards

1
Q

what is ergonomics?

A

the study of designing equipment and devices that fit the human body, its movements and cognitive abilities

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2
Q

cognitive ergonomics

A

ensuring machinery is designed to fit in with the way people think

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3
Q

what is working memory?

A

information passes through sensory memory -> working memory -> long term memory
there are different systems for different types of information

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4
Q

different systems in working memory

A

central executive controls the visuo-spatial sketch pad and the phonological loop
allocates data to subsystems
is responsible for mental arithmetic and problem solving

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5
Q

visuo-spatial sketch pad

A

stores and processes information on spatial form, and is important in navigation

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6
Q

phonologcial loop

A

deals with spoken and written material

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7
Q

what happens when information is presented in different ways?

A

it reduces cognitive overload by using different processing mechanisms

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8
Q

what is cognitive overload?

A

there is a limit to the amount of stimuli that people can handle

1) limited capacity to process incoming stimuli
2) capacity to process information is exceeded by amount of information making a claim on our attention -> leads to tunnel vision/attentional blindness
3) more attention is given to intense, uncontrollable stimuli
4) attention capacity can be depleted by prolonged demands

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9
Q

how is cognitive overload measured?

A
  • by complex tasks and secondary tasks. raises ethical issues by actively causing stress
  • also by self report, which becomes subjective
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10
Q

the hawthorne effect

A

tendency of people to try harder and perform better when they are participants in an experiment

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11
Q

social facilitation

A

performance is altered due to the presence of other people, and an audience can have a positive/negative effect.
- presence of others doing the same activity enhances performance (triplett 1898)
- an evaluating audience increases performance
but sometimes people perform worse. individual differences can affect performance with an audience.

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12
Q

social faciliation theory

A

zajonc (1965) proposed that being in the presence of others causes arousal, leading to an increase in performance

  • general performance on tasks was enhanced by an audience
  • performance on harder tasks was decreased
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13
Q

what did drews and doig (2014) aim to study?

A
  • aimed to create an ICU display to support detection of actue physiological changes in patients
  • whether new display reduces cognitive overload on staff
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14
Q

what did the prototype monitor show?

A

current state objective (CSO) providing info on current state of patient and their vital signs
used shapes and colours to increase speed at which info could be processed

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15
Q

who were the participants in drews and doig’s (2014) study?

A

42 registered nurses- experimental group and control

used new display vs simplified version

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16
Q

what were the four different scenarios in drews and doig’s (2014) study?

A

3 critical vs 1 stable patient in a random order

  • told to verbally evaluate the physiological status
  • early sepsis, septic shock, pumolnary embolism, stable state
17
Q

what were the results of drews and doig’s (2014) study?

A

speed- 30% faster with new CVS display

accuracy- increased by a third

18
Q

what did drews and doig (2014) conclude?

A

better display design can reduce cognitive load and increase patient care

19
Q

strategies to reduce cognitive load

A
  • reducing strain on working memory by integrating various sources of information
  • reduce amount of unecessary repitition load
  • use visual and auditory techniques to increase short term memory capacity
  • remove unecessary visual elements
  • use chunking to reduce number of things that have to be attented to at once
  • reduce choices needed to make a decision. time to decide increases with number of choices available