347 | -- | 350 | Nancy J. Cooke. Preface to the Special 50th Anniversary Issue of ::::Human Factors:::: |
351 | -- | 353 | Eduardo Salas. At the Turn of the 21st Century: Reflections on Our Science |
354 | -- | 358 | William C. Howell. Human Factors in the 1990s: Sealing Transition Cracks |
359 | -- | 360 | Robert C. Williges. Personal Reflections From the Fifth Editor of ::::Human Factors:::: |
361 | -- | 367 | Stanley N. Roscoe, Hector M. Acosta. A Flight by Periscope and Where It Landed |
368 | -- | 374 | Colin G. Drury. Human Factors in Industrial Systems: 40 Years On |
380 | -- | 384 | David Shinar. Looks Are (Almost) Everything: Where Drivers Look to Get Information |
385 | -- | 392 | David Rempel. The Split Keyboard: An Ergonomics Success Story |
393 | -- | 396 | William S. Marras. A Critical Review of a Pivotal Scientific Contribution: Liles and Associates 24 Years Later |
397 | -- | 403 | Christopher D. Wickens. Situation Awareness: Review of Mica Endsley s 1995 Articles on Situation Awareness Theory and Measurement |
404 | -- | 410 | John D. Lee. Review of a Pivotal ::::Human Factors:::: Article: Humans and Automation: Use, Misuse, Disuse, Abuse |
411 | -- | 417 | Neville Moray. The Good, the Bad, and the Future: On the Archaeology of Ergonomics |
418 | -- | 426 | Thomas B. Sheridan. Risk, Human Error, and System Resilience: Fundamental Ideas |
427 | -- | 432 | Neil Charness, Michael Tuffiash. The Role of Expertise Research and Human Factors in Capturing, Explaining, and Producing Superior Performance |
433 | -- | 441 | Joel S. Warm, Raja Parasuraman, Gerald Matthews. Vigilance Requires Hard Mental Work and Is Stressful |
442 | -- | 448 | Francis T. Durso, Arathi Sethumadhavan. Situation Awareness: Understanding Dynamic Environments |
449 | -- | 455 | Christopher D. Wickens. Multiple Resources and Mental Workload |
456 | -- | 460 | Gary Klein. Naturalistic Decision Making |
461 | -- | 467 | Brian M. Kleiner. Macroergonomics: Work System Analysis and Design |
468 | -- | 474 | Raja Parasuraman, Glenn F. Wilson. Putting the Brain to Work: Neuroergonomics Past, Present, and Future |
475 | -- | 480 | Emilie M. Roth. Uncovering the Requirements of Cognitive Work |
481 | -- | 488 | Robert R. Hoffman. Human Factors Contributions to Knowledge Elicitation |
489 | -- | 496 | Richard W. Pew. More Than 50 Years of History and Accomplishments in Human Performance Model Development |
497 | -- | 505 | Wayne D. Gray. Cognitive Architectures: Choreographing the Dance of Mental Operations With the Task Environment |
506 | -- | 510 | Nadine B. Sarter. Investigating Mode Errors on Automated Flight Decks: Illustrating the Problem-Driven, Cumulative, and Interdisciplinary Nature of Human Factors Research |
511 | -- | 520 | Raja Parasuraman, Christopher D. Wickens. Humans: Still Vital After All These Years of Automation |
521 | -- | 528 | John D. Lee. Fifty Years of Driving Safety Research |
529 | -- | 533 | Kenneth R. Laughery, Michael S. Wogalter. On the Symbiotic Relationship Between Warnings Research and Forensics |
534 | -- | 539 | Nancy J. Stone. Human Factors and Education: Evolution and Contributions |
540 | -- | 547 | Eduardo Salas, Nancy J. Cooke, Michael A. Rosen. On Teams, Teamwork, and Team Performance: Discoveries and Developments |
548 | -- | 555 | Neil Charness. Aging and Human Performance |
556 | -- | 559 | Kent L. Norman. Better Design of Menu Selection Systems Through Cognitive Psychology and Human Factors |
560 | -- | 564 | Deborah A. Boehm-Davis. Discoveries and Developments in Human-Computer Interaction |